Investors’ unconditional love for emerging markets is fading

Bloomberg

Investors are punishing markets where policy makers haven’t done enough to stem deteriorating current-account balances, ballooning inflation and a run on their currencies.
They became unforgiving as rising Treasury yields and a stronger dollar put the case for riskier investments in the balance. Money is no longer cheap or plentiful, and low-quality investments burdened by policy baggage are being weeded out.
That’s sent a gauge of emerging-market currencies toward its worst week since Donald Trump won the US presidential election. Politicians and central bankers from Argentina to Indonesia are now attempting to save their exchange rates from the bearish onslaught. Expect more frequent interventions and “emergency meetings.”

LACK OF URGENCY
For more than two years, developing nations had it easy as yield-chasing investors poured billions into them, sometimes ignoring weak external finances and monetary-policy complacency. Central bankers came under pressure from politicians who wanted to keep interest rates low and sustain high deficits to please voters. They had little sense of urgency to fix their economies because capital flows remained buoyant and markets always rebounded from mini selloffs.
Since the start of 2016, bond investors have put in $1.5 trillion into new debt issues by emerging-market governments and corporates. Stocks added $8 trillion in market capitalisation between January 2016 and January 2018. An emerging-market exchange-traded fund has gone almost six years without a single day of outflows.
But after Treasury yields crossed the 3 percent mark in late April, something snapped in the relationship between emerging markets and global investors.
Harvard professor Carmen Reinhart points to mounting debt loads, weakening terms of trade, rising global interest rates and stalling growth as reasons for concern. In fact, developing nations are worse off than during their two most recent moments of weakness:
The 2008 global financial crisis and 2013 taper tantrum, when equities endured routs of 64 percent and 17 percent respectively.
Argentina was forced to spend 10 percent of its foreign-exchange reserves to stanch a depreciation that had taken the peso to an 18 percent slump this month. While the intervention halted the plunge, the question remains whether the central bank has managed to restore its credibility. A mistimed relaxation of the inflation target back in December set in motion what turned into a 23 percent tumble in the currency this year that forced authorities to hike interest rates to a world-beating 40 percent and turn for help to the International Monetary Fund.
In Indonesia, the rupiah fell to the weakest level since October 2015 before Thursday’s interest-rate meeting. Foreign investors are net sellers of about $2.9 billion of Indonesian stocks this year, turning the nation’s equities into the worst performer in Asia. Net outflows from rupiah bonds have totaled $2.3 billion since the
end of March, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
The selloff also spread to dollar bonds from Indonesian issuers after the nation posted the biggest trade deficit in four years, fuelling speculation the local currency will weaken further and push up servicing costs on international debt.

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