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EM Debt: Are Investors Looking at the Wrong Risks?

05 July 2024

Read Time 10 MIN

Despite profound political risk in developed markets, market participants are still shouting that EM has all the political risk. They’re wrong, here’s why.

Average Annual Total Returns* (%) as of 31 May 2024

Month End as of May 31, 2024
  1 MO 3 MO 1 YR 3 YR Life
USD R1 Inc (Inception 12/06/14) 1.81 0.93 7.40 -0.95 0.31
USD I1 Inc (Inception 20/08/13) 1.86 1.05 7.94 -0.40 2.30
USD I2 Inc (Inception 20/08/13) 1.86 1.08 8.05 -0.30 2.42
EUR Hedged I1 Inc (Inception 06/10/15) 1.71 0.63 5.88 -2.44 1.59
EUR Hedged I2 Inc (Inception 22/08/17) 1.70 0.65 5.99 -2.30 0.24
50% GBI-EM/50% EMBI - USD1 1.71 0.59 8.05 -2.89 1.72

Past performance is no guarantee for future performance. Investing is subject to risk, including the possible loss of principal. The performance is based on complete 12-month periods. The return may increase or decrease as a result of currency fluctuations. You cannot directly invest in an index.

 Periods greater than one year are annualized.

1 Life performance for the 50% GBI-EM/50% EMBI - USD benchmark is presented in U.S. Dollars (USD) as of Class I1 inception date of 20/8/2013

During May, the fund increased local currency exposure in Asia (Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia), and added some China corporate exposure due to China’s economic and policy traction. We reduced local currency exposure in Brazil, which is a popular overweight, where the country is beginning an important debate on the role of the central bank. We’ll sit that debate out as it is too profound and fraught, especially given bullish positioning. We also increased duration in the fund. We continue to think selected emerging markets currencies (EMFX) will outperform and are tilting toward longer duration as U.S. rate concerns appear over-ripe. Rate cuts will of course support EM local currency. But, we curate and had underweights in Mexico local and now Brazil local (where the market is very long), and are maintaining our overweight in South Africa (where the market is very underweight and developments seem positive). These country-specific stances will be determinant, “EM local vs. hard” will not. That’s the way active EM bonds are supposed to be managed, not by providing benchmark exposure. We end May with a carry of 6.8%, yield to worst of 8.8%, duration of 6.1, and around 54.5% of the fund in local currency. Our biggest outright exposures are South Africa (local), Thailand (local), Indonesia (local), China (Hard), and Malaysia (local).

U.S. rates: Get ready for growing recession talk and a rally in duration for which the market is completely unprepared. “High for long” is priced in, but economic weakness is not, so look for the market’s latest narrative to implode… soon. Too much of U.S. consumption, and thus growth, has been attenuated by the “wealth effect”, making any recession self-reinforcing, to our eye. This topic has to be the most-chewed-upon morsel at the moment, so we’re not sure what to say that might be additive or that we haven’t said before. We’ll just recap our argument. It’s our judgment that the following could be important drivers of lower policy and market rates for the coming months:

  1. Low confidence due to unprecedented U.S. political and policy uncertainty is a significant challenge to economic actors’ propensities to consume, save, and invest.

  2. Real incomes and wealth are challenged, especially at lower ends of economic wealth (in a political year).

  3. Fed reaction functions see high oil prices (or tariffs, even) as reasons to ease policy rates (as the higher input costs strain consumers or producers).

  4. The market is only publishing “high for long” articles at this point and bond positioning is very cautious on duration, despite roughly 4 cuts having already been priced out this year. ‘Nuf said as they say.

Politics: Despite profound political risk in the U.S. and Europe, market participants keep shouting that EM has all the political risk worth focusing on. This is wrong. Mexican, South African, and Indian elections are accepted by all parties, and the nearterm implications are mostly for policy, not politics. This is our day job and we happened to have had a big underweight in Mexico, due to policy risk, for example. In particular, our concern was that the Mexican central bank would have more dovish board members (among other risks), while positioning is all bullish. Given Moreno’s “super-majority” emanating from the elections, this policy risk is now on steroids. But it’s not political risk. In South Africa, professionals had been watching whether the ruling ANC would fall below 40% of the vote-take, but the initial headlines and focus were on the not-news fact of the ANC losing its 50% majority. That was never in question, the issue was always the ANC’s coalition decisions after the election in which they’d lose their majority, and right now a coalition with the marketfriendly DA appears likeliest. This would be very positive policy news for South Africa for a market that is underweight, but it is not political risk per se. The U.S. and Europe face both political and policy risk (which we won’t comment on, as popular media are filled with examples).

Geopolitics: Risks are expanding and escalating, maintaining EM-supportive supply risk in commodities. The true conflicts in Europe and the Middle East (or West Asia) are now - NATO v. Russia in Europe and Israel v. Iran v. Turkey in the Middle East (not Ukraine v. Russia, and Israel v. Hamas). Popular media attention will turn to the risks of nuclear conflict, we’d expect, supporting U.S. bond duration. NATO operation and use of longer-range missiles fired into Russia are an obvious risk, and the absence of any dialog between adversaries points to no resolution. Importantly and practically, this means that any “ceasefire” between Ukraine and Russia will be a pause in a bigger conflict.

Exhibit 1 – RMB Use In Trade Transcends USD

RMB Use In Trade Transcends USD

Source: SAFE and Staff calculations.
Notes: Includes receipts and payments between domestic non-banking sectors and non-residents through domestic banks, excluding receipts and payments in cash.

The changes to our top positions are summarized below. Our largest positions in May were South Africa, Thailand, Indonesia, China, and Malaysia:

  • We increased our local currency exposure in Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia. EM Asia’s local duration looks more attractive now given the outlook for rate cuts in the U.S. (which has priced out roughly four cuts this year. In addition, Asian EMs can benefit from China’s measures to support the housing sector and prop up growth. These factors improved the technical test score for all three countries. Further, Thailand’s stronger than expected Q1 GDP growth can ease pressure on the central bank to cut rates, while Thailand’s tourism is doing well (including tourists from China). This strengthened the economic and policy test scores for the country.
  • We also increased our hard currency corporate exposure in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. We were motivated by recent geopolitical developments in which the friction has moved from within the region to between bigger players in the region (the battle is Israel v. Turkey v. Iran, with Israel v. Hamas largely contained so far), as well as China’s authorities push to resolve the housing crisis and improve the growth outlook, which should support the outlook for commodity prices, including oil. Further, the gradually cooling U.S. economy points to further disinflation, leaving room for the Fed rate cuts and supporting duration. In terms of our investment process, this improved the technical test scores for both countries.
  • Finally, we increased our local currency and hard currency sovereign exposure in South Africa, and hard currency corporate exposures in China. China’s increase was due to a larger and more targeted support for housing, including unfinished projects and unsold housing stock. This is a move in the right direction, and it improved the policy test score for the country. South Africa’s pre-election polls pointed to a less extreme governing coalition, against the backdrop of better fiscal outcomes and an absence of the pre-election spending spree. The coalition talks are still on-going, but there is a good chance of having a marketfriendly alliance between the ANC and the DA party. If this scenario materializes, it will improve the policy test score for the country.
  • We reduced our local currency exposure in Brazil. The central bank is poised to pause as inflation expectations continue to drift higher (including the expectations for 2026 lately). The pace of fiscal consolidation also looks less certain, while the appointment of the central bank’s new governor might push towards more policy easing than necessary. In terms of our investment process, this weakened the economic and policy test scores for the country. The market is bullish, but likely unprepared for a long policy debate on the status of the central bank.
  • We also reduced our hard currency quasi-sovereign exposure in Mexico (Pemex), and local currency exposure in Singapore. We used Singapore’s bond as a funder for other higher-yielding opportunities. Bonds issued by Mexico’s state-owned petroleum company PEMEX staged a nice rally recently, due to continued government support for the oil producer; that support is significantly already priced and was the basic thesis for the investment, so we decided to take profits on this position. Pemex also has a layer of ESG risk that may not be priced into the bonds.
  • Finally, we reduced our hard currency sovereign exposure in Gabon and local currency exposure in Kenya. Our meeting with Gabon’s country delegation raised several concerns, including the government’s intention to issue more sovereign bonds despite a great deal of fiscal uncertainty and with no clear explanation regarding the use of proceeds. In Kenya, we are getting negative signals about the government’s ability to boost revenue collection (as well as taxes on local financial instruments). These developments weakened the policy test scores for both countries, and we decided to take profits in Kenya as local bonds rallied a lot since we bought them.

Major Risks of Investing in the VanEck Emerging Markets Bond UCITS Fund

  • Emerging Market Risk: In emerging markets, the legal, judicial and regulatory infrastructure is still developing and there is much legal uncertainty both for local market participants and their counterparties. Investments in these countries may involve specific political, economic and financial risks that have a significant impact on valuations and liquidity of those investments. They are also exposed to additional risks that are difficult to calculate and would not arise with investments made in OECD countries or other emerging markets.
  • Currency Risk: Some of the Fund’s assets can be invested in currencies, other than the Fund’s currency. The performance of the Sub-Fund can be subject to elevated volatility on the downside as well as on the upside due to currency fluctuations. Northbound investments by the Fund in the Bond Connect Securities will be traded and settled in Renminbi / RMB, the official currency of China. The RMB is currently not a freely convertible currency.
  • Credit Risk: The Fund will invest in bonds that are subject to varying degrees of risk that the issuers of the securities will have their credit ratings downgraded or will default, potentially reducing the value of the securities.

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Important Disclosure

This is a marketing communication. Please refer to the prospectus of the UCITS and to the KID before making any final investment decisions.

This information originates from VanEck (Europe) GmbH, which has been appointed as distributor of VanEck products in Europe by the Management Company VanEck Asset Management B.V., incorporated under Dutch law and registered with the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM). VanEck (Europe) GmbH with registered address at Kreuznacher Str. 30, 60486 Frankfurt, Germany, is a financial services provider regulated by the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority in Germany (BaFin).

The information is intended only to provide general and preliminary information to investors and shall not be construed as investment, legal or tax advice VanEck (Europe) GmbH, VanEck Switzerland AG, VanEck Securities UK Limited and their associated and affiliated companies (together “VanEck”) assume no liability with regards to any investment, divestment or retention decision taken by the investor on the basis of this information. The views and opinions expressed are those of the author(s) but not necessarily those of VanEck. Opinions are current as of the publication date and are subject to change with market conditions. Certain statements contained herein may constitute projections, forecasts and other forward-looking statements, which do not reflect actual results. Information provided by third party sources is believed to be reliable and have not been independently verified for accuracy or completeness and cannot be guaranteed. Brokerage or transaction fees may apply.

All performance information is based on historical data and does not predict future returns. Investing is subject to risk, including the possible loss of principal.

No part of this material may be reproduced in any form, or referred to in any other publication, without express written permission of VanEck.

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