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While emerging market sovereign credit spreads have widened only slightly, the real threat to lower-rated countries comes from the sharp sell-off in US Treasuries. This pushes the total 'all-in' borrowing yield significantly higher, threatening market access for frontier markets even if their specific risk premium remains contained.
Emerging market credit spreads are tightening while developed markets' are widening. This divergence is not a fundamental mispricing but is explained by unique, positive developments in specific sovereigns like post-election Argentina and bonds in Venezuela on hopes of restructuring.
While tight credit spreads suggest low returns for investors, they serve a critical function: allowing lower-rated sovereigns to regain market access. This revival of issuance from countries like Ecuador and Pakistan, previously priced out, is a credit-enhancing event for the entire asset class, signaling an end to a recent wave of defaults.
Analysts express caution as EM sovereign credit spreads trade near historical lows despite a major conflict. This tight pricing creates an asymmetric risk profile, where the potential for spreads to widen significantly if recession fears mount far outweighs the potential for further tightening, presenting a poor risk-reward balance for investors.
While a stronger growth environment supports EM currencies, it is problematic for low-yielding EM government bonds. Their valuations were based on aggressive local central bank easing cycles which now have less scope to continue, especially with a potentially shallower Fed cutting cycle, making them vulnerable to a correction.
Emerging market high-yield bonds are demonstrating significant strength, with spreads tightening year-to-date while US high-yield spreads remain flat. This outperformance has persisted through record sovereign issuance, suggesting a strong underlying bid for EM risk and a successful spread compression theme within the asset class.
A weaker dollar provides more than just a diversification benefit for dollar-denominated EM bonds. It fundamentally improves sovereign balance sheets by boosting commodity-driven fiscal receipts, reducing capital flight, enabling easier monetary policy, and ultimately aiding growth and debt dynamics, justifying tighter credit spreads.
Despite compressed spreads and improved market access, credit markets are not complacent. Pricing for the most vulnerable emerging market sovereigns still implies a significant 17% near-term and 40% five-year probability of default. This is well above historical averages, signaling lingering investor caution and skepticism about long-term stability.
Despite being at historically tight levels, EM sovereign credit spreads are unlikely to widen significantly from an EM-specific slowdown. The catalyst for a major sell-off would have to be a 'beta move' originating from a crisis in core US markets, such as equities or corporate credit, given the current strength of EM fundamentals.
Despite historically tight spreads and a record-breaking $56 billion in year-to-date issuance, the EM sovereign credit market has remained stable. This resilience, following a period of strong outperformance, suggests robust underlying investor demand. The market is absorbing the deluge of supply without significant spread widening, pointing to a constructive outlook and potential for further spread compression in lower-rated credits.
When a steepening yield curve is caused by sticky long-term yields, overall borrowing costs remain high. This discourages companies from issuing new debt, and the reduced supply provides a powerful technical support that helps keep credit spreads tight, even amid macro uncertainty.