Global government bonds: opportunities & diversification in emerging markets
Vikram Aggarwal on the outlook for sovereign bonds as inflation eases, the growth of emerging market local-currency bonds and current idiosyncratic opportunities.
Our view is that regardless of which DM central bank – the US Federal Reserve, European Central Bank or Bank of England – moves first, rate cuts should be supportive for duration-linked assets such as sovereign bonds. We think it is warranted in a sovereign bond strategy to increase overall duration given the likely move lower in yields.
However, markets seem to be assigning a very high probability to a risk-friendly, soft landing economic scenario. We are more sceptical that this can be achieved based on historical economic cycles. There are many potential risks this year ranging from volatile election-year politics to heightened geopolitical tensions in Ukraine/Russia and Israel/Gaza.
We find it incongruous that risk-asset valuations remain so ebullient. Equity markets have touched records this year, and sovereign and credit spreads are extremely expensive. We think it makes sense to have a very conservative exposure to spreads. We think it makes sense to be taking outright short exposure to credit spreads — positioning for spreads to widen in both developed and emerging markets.
India’s equity market has attracted a lot of attention, but local currency bonds haven’t seen significant inflows. That may change as the bonds enter sovereign benchmark indices, including JPMorgan and Bloomberg; we expect that a lot of money will be flowing into India, and this will support its balance of payments position.
We think investing in India today has a similar profile to investments in China in the 1990s. The last 30 years have been China’s period of growth, and the next 10, 20 or 30 years could be India’s.
One of these frontier markets is Egypt – post the large devaluation recently; we see the Egyptian pound as undervalued and attractive to take long exposure. Egypt has agreed to an IMF loan programme, with the UAE and Saudi Arabia also providing support, all of which have provided ample foreign currency reserves to support the valuation of the pound. Egypt borders Gaza and Israel, so it is near the epicentre of a geopolitical crisis. Yet, we believe for this reason that the US, Europe and the key regional players don’t want Egypt to be pushed into further financial stress.
As active sovereign investors, we can diversify the portfolio by identifying countries that may be at different points of their own economic cycle and take positions accordingly. When buying local-currency sovereign bonds, for example, investors have exposure to both currency risk and rates (duration) risk. As active investors, we are able to hedge the currency risk and, for example, USD-hedged EM local-currency sovereign bonds have performed much better than currency-unhedged over the last 20 years.
We believe that by globally diversifying the portfolio, and by taking an active approach to choosing rates, sovereign spread or currency risk, we have the potential to deliver superior returns.
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