JPMorgan Cuts EM Local Currency Debt to ‘Underweight’ as Russia-Ukraine Woes Bite

JPMorgan Cuts EM Local Currency Debt to ‘Underweight’ as Russia-Ukraine Woes Bite
A sign outside the headquarters of JP Morgan Chase & Co. in New York, on Sept. 19, 2013. (Mike Segar/Reuters)
Reuters
3/26/2022
Updated:
3/26/2022

JPMorgan analysts have slapped a sell, or “underweight,” recommendation on emerging market local currency sovereign debt due to the global fallout from the Russia-Ukraine crisis.

Emerging market fixed income assets have lost 6–9 percent of their value since Russia invaded its neighbor a month ago, JPMorgan estimates, with nervousness about the war and its impact on global energy and food prices adding to existing pressures.

A number of top EM central banks are signalling interest rates will now need to rise faster than previously thought, feeding concerns about economically debilitating bouts of “stagflation”—where high inflation and interest rates hikes sap growth.

“A month of war has accelerated existing trends and surfaced vulnerabilities,” JPMorgan’s analysts said in a note published late on Thursday.

With the U.S. Federal Reserve and emerging market central banks ramping up interest rates, JPMorgan also said it “made sense to take advantage of the recent pull-back” in local currency government bond yields versus U.S. Treasuries to enter an ‘underweight’ position in emerging market assets.

The U.S. investment bank said major metal exporting countries like South Africa, Chile, and Peru could still do well but warned EM fixed-income assets more generally were now facing a more “stagflationary” trajectory.

What Moscow has termed a “special military operation” in Ukraine has also compounded the already-slow start to the year for emerging market sovereign bond sales.

Cumulative issuance year-to-date is one of the lowest on record and JPMorgan forecasts EM-wide bond issuance will now be significantly below previous years at just $142 billion in 2022.

“This risk-off environment has also increased the cost for those countries that are trying to issue bonds in hard currency,” the bank’s analysts added.

Some countries most vulnerable to higher energy and food prices are also having to deploy “crisis-lite” playbooks.

This has been seen this week with Egypt’s 15 percent devaluation of its currency while asking the International Monetary fund about additional support. Sri Lanka has also overcome long-held resistance to IMF help and Tunisia is holding talks.

“The medium term investment outlook is looking more challenging for these countries as a result,” JPMorgan said.

By Jorgelina do Rosario