The
search for yield knows no bounds and leads to cross-market linkages. Investors
have become more international in their search for yield and returns. Certainly
with negative rates, the yield opportunities within many countries are, to say
the least, limited. Consequently, capital will flow elsewhere especially to
emerging markets. This creates a new set of balance sheet problems for
investors because they both face and create currency risk. Shocks to bilateral
exchange rates will create a funding mismatch on the balance sheets of global
investors. These currency-funding mismatches will spillover to the price of
local EM bonds. Additionally, their flows associate with bond transactions in
and out of a country may impact exchange rates.
This link between capital flows, investor balance sheet risk and credit
means there is a well-defined relationship between exchange rate changes and
local currency emerging market bonds. The currency rate is a risk attribute for
EM bond spreads. (See BIS Working paper 775 Bond risk premia and the exchange rate)
When
local yields fall, currencies tend to appreciate which makes bond returns more sensitive
to currency fluctuations. Put another way, dollar durations are higher than
local currency durations. There is also a negative association between local
bond spreads and currency appreciation. Interestingly, the link between
currencies and credit spreads is not with the trade-weighted exchange rate but
with the dollar exchange rate. The impact of an appreciation of the
trade-weighted currency will have the opposite impact on spreads. A
trade-weighted appreciation will have a negative impact on growth and thus
increase credit spreads. Hence,
investors need to watch both bilateral and trade-weighted exchange rates when
making local currency bond investments.
These
conclusions suggest that the decision to invest and the impact on credit
spreads are associated with the set of other opportunities around the globe. You
cannot separate the credit decision from what is happening to the currency.
This link will become more apparent if we see greater swings in the dollar from
changes in monetary policy. If the Fed makes a move, which impacts the dollar, local
bond markets around the world will feel it.
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