Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

In a reversal of historical norms, emerging market policymakers have been more disciplined with monetary and fiscal policy. This has led to lower average inflation in EM countries, creating attractive opportunities with real yields that are significantly higher than in developed markets.

Related Insights

Contrary to historical perception, emerging markets (EM) have evolved into a more resilient and reliable asset class. Improved policy frameworks, healthier fiscal and current account balances pre-crisis, and better inflation control mean EMs are better positioned to withstand global shocks than in the past, shifting them from 'racy' to 'reliable'.

Emerging market central banks' hawkish commentary while cutting rates reinforces market stability. This low volatility, in turn, gives them confidence to continue the cutting cycle. This feedback loop can make low-volatility periods surprisingly persistent, as the actions and outcomes mutually reinforce each other.

The Federal Reserve's decision to keep rates unchanged provides a crucial, if unintentional, benefit to Emerging Markets. It limits pressure on EM central banks that would otherwise be forced to hike rates to defend weakening currencies against a backdrop of rising global interest rates, giving them more time to assess the shock.

Emerging market monetary policy is diverging significantly. Markets now price in rate hikes for low-yielding countries like Colombia, Korea, and Czechia due to stalled disinflation. In contrast, high-yielding markets continue to offer attractive yield compression opportunities, representing the primary focus for investors in the space.

In a significant role reversal, emerging market central banks were more proactive and aggressive in tightening monetary policy to combat post-COVID inflation than developed market institutions. This action demonstrates a secular improvement in their credibility and sovereign credit quality.

While regions like LATAM and EMEA are still in a disinflationary phase, Asia's negative inflation surprises have ended. It's now experiencing small upside surprises, suggesting its monetary policy will diverge, with central banks remaining on hold, contrary to easing trends elsewhere.

In emerging markets with high real yields (like EMEA and LATAM), central banks are responding to rapid currency appreciation by leaning towards monetary policy easing, such as rate cuts. This is seen as a more effective and tradable reaction than direct FX market intervention.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, a more dovish stance from an Emerging Market (EM) central bank might not cause sustained currency weakness. In a risk-on environment, lower policy rates can attract significant capital inflows into bonds. This demand for local assets can overwhelm the initial negative rate effect and ultimately strengthen the currency.

A significant shift is occurring where EM central banks, like in South Africa and Korea, are turning hawkish pre-emptively to combat inflation. This is happening even without the typical trigger of currency depreciation, indicating a proactive policy response to the inflation-growth mix rather than a reactive move to provide risk premia for a weakening currency.

Unlike the US, emerging markets are constrained by financial markets. If they let their fiscal balance deteriorate, markets punish their currency, triggering a vicious cycle of inflation and higher interest rates. This threat serves as a natural check on government spending, enforcing a level of fiscal responsibility.