Sunday, November 24, 2024

Junk Bonds at Risk as Emerging Markets Brace for ‘Trumponomics’

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(Bloomberg) — The junk-bond rally in emerging markets risks being just an interlude between the debt crisis of the past four years and a new bout of distress in the next four, if Donald Trump does what he says he will.

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A Bloomberg index of high-yielding sovereign dollar debt is heading for a 15% surge this year, the biggest annual gain since 2016. Global investors are rewarding countries such as Argentina, Sri Lanka and Ghana for healing their defaults and embarking on economic reforms. This rally has shown resilience even to the US yield spikes of the past two months.

President-elect Trump’s return to White House has raised doubts about the longevity of that rally. The world’s poorest nations — which form the bulk of the EM junk-bond universe — stand to lose the most from his pledges to raise trade tariffs, boost government spending and deport foreigners without visas. Their dependence on dollar flows means US policy will hit them more than countries that have domestic sources of capital and demand.

“Trump’s anticipated policy changes will likely push the Federal Reserve to pause rate cuts, keeping the global economy in a higher-for-longer interest-rate environment,” said Reza Baqir, a former governor of Pakistan’s central bank and now the Dubai-based head of sovereign-advisory services at Alvarez & Marsal.

“This shift weakens emerging-market currencies against the dollar, amplifying challenges for countries already grappling with economic vulnerabilities. As reserves are depleted and external stability is compromised, these dynamics heighten the risk of financial distress.”

Ratings companies are also watching Trump’s policies for their potential impact on sovereign creditworthiness. Moody’s Ratings, for instance, is paying attention to how much of a “natural flow of dollars” a country has in order to insure against trade disruptions.

“Disruptions to global trade from tariffs and other measures will obviously be bad for emerging markets that export to the US, even if they price their exports in dollar terms,” said Vittoria Zoli, an analyst at Moody’s. “That could be compounded by a strong US exchange rate, particularly if US policy rates stay higher than previously expected.”

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