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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Emerging economies await end to ECB largesse

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Emerging economies’ debt in euros has shot to record highs thanks to European Central Bank largesse, and yet an approaching end to this generosity won’t necessarily inflict the kind of pain that markets once suffered at the hands of the US Fed. The ECB’s intention to start winding up its 60 billion euro (£55 billion) a month stimulus programme for the euro zone economy has revived bad memories of when the Federal Reserve tried to signal something similar in 2013.


That led to the ‘taper tantrum’ when investors took fright at the prospect that the ultra-cheap dollar funding they had grown used to would taper away. While the ECB will doubtless proceed cautiously with its own tapering process, the risk is that it could derail an emerging market (EM) rally.


UBS strategist Manik Narain, however, argues that withdrawing quantitative easing (QE) in the euro zone won’t hurt so much as the dollar process. “ECB tapering will have an impact but it’s definitely the lesser of the two evils,” he said.


While governments, companies and consumers in emerging economies have binged on cheap euro borrowing for the past 2-1/2 years, the total remains modest compared with their dollar debts, Narain pointed out.


No central bank is finding it easy to withdraw policies that helped to keep Western economies afloat after the global financial crisis. Investors are awaiting word from ECB President Mario Draghi, who will speak at a central bankers’ meeting in the United States this week, on how he proposes to engineer a gradual end to the era of mass bond buying and negative interest rates.


The thing is to avoid a repeat of the taper tantrum of four years ago. This wiped half a trillion dollars off MSCI’s emerging equity index in three months, raised countries’ borrowing costs by an average 1 percentage point and pushed some emerging currencies down by as much as 20 per cent against the dollar.


Now it is the ECB’s turn. Draghi will deliver no new policy messages during this week’s conference at Jackson Hole, sources say. However, expectations are high that he will tackle the issue at one of the ECB’s policy meetings next month or in October.


Under Draghi, the ECB has pumped more than 2 trillion euros ($2.35 trillion) into the global financial system. His first hint in June that tapering might be coming pushed the MSCI’s emerging equity index down 2 per cent over the following week.


On currency markets, Turkey’s lira and South Africa’s rand fell sharply, not only against a broadly stronger euro but also the dollar. Investors were unsettled by the prospect of higher euro zone bond yields dragging up US borrowing costs in their wake.


Emerging markets have achieved stellar gains this year but investors using the euro have largely missed out due to the currency conversion. The dollar has fallen 5 per cent versus a basket of emerging currencies tracked by UBS, but the euro is up 6 per cent.


Only four emerging currencies — those of Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Mexico — have strengthened against the euro this year.


Developing economies are more exposed to the euro than any other time in history. Their euro-denominated debt — including bonds and bank loans — has ballooned by almost 100 billion euros over the last seven years to around 250 billion, according to data from the Bank for International Settlements.


In Mexico alone, debt in euros has quadrupled since 2010 to over 42 billion euros. But even then emerging borrowers’ euro debt is dwarfed by the $1.7 trillion they owe in dollars. So they are much more susceptible to movements in US government bond yields than those on the euro zone benchmark, German Bunds.


“The bulk of EM external debt is in dollars rather than euro and the EM corporate sector gravitates towards dollar funding... so a 50 basis-point move in Treasuries matters a lot more than 50 bps move in Bunds, other things being equal.”


European exposure to emerging stocks and bonds also lags the United States. UBS research suggests more than 60 per cent of EM carry trades — borrowings in cheap developed economy currencies invested in higher-yielding emerging currencies — are denominated in dollars, Narain said.


— Reuters


Marc Jones and Sujata Rao


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