It may be too early to turn bullish on emerging markets -- but a raft of bailouts pledged by the IMF and China has some investors deciding it’s too risky to stay bearish.
Over the past two weeks, the International Monetary Fund has been sewing up or inching toward loan agreements with some of the most vulnerable nations -- namely Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Zambia, Egypt and Chile -- after months of negotiations. Meanwhile, China is overcoming its own reticence to offer debt relief, saying it will forgive the liabilities of 17 African nations and redirect its own IMF reserves to the continent’s aid.
Still, as long as the dollar doesn’t begin a consistent slide and Federal Reserve rate-hike expectations stay firm, global investors won’t fully return to the asset class.
But with the IMF acting to counter some of the pain hanging over emerging markets, others are starting to give these nations another look.
“We have seen some inflows in recent weeks with tactical additions from global investors in certain pockets,” said Neeraj Seth, the head of Asian credit at BlackRock Inc., which he says is neutral on emerging-market assets and expects to see attractive opportunities in the coming quarters. “As we see further stabilization of US rates volatility and stabilization of the dollar, we will potentially see global investors revisiting emerging-market allocations.”