Pimco advocates emerging markets

The flight to quality was not limited to certain developed-country debt during the volatility in the second half of 2011. Indeed, Pimco’s global co-head of emerging-markets portfolio management Ramin Toloui says that some emerging-market government bonds are potential safe havens during times of market stress.

He says that the bond giant’s Global Advantage Government Bond Index now has an approximately 35 per cent exposure to emerging-markets.

A standard government-bond index typically has an exposure of around 5 per cent to emerging-market government debt, Toloui says.

Pimco’s Global Advantage Bond Indexes (GLADI) are a series of GDP-weighted, investment-grade fixed income benchmarks. Pimco uses the indexes as benchmarks from which it takes active positions around for its GLADI group of funds. These GLADI funds have more than $9.4 billion in combined assets under management in both government and corporate bond strategies.

An increased exposure to emerging markets also fits into Pimco’s overarching view of the long-term global rebalancing underway, with slow-growing developed markets deleveraging and capital shifting to assets in fast-growing emerging markets.

“If you look at a world where many investors are looking to diversify their global bond holdings, such as sovereign wealth funds in the Middle East and Asia and central banks, a key asset class they are going into is government debt in emerging-market countries,” Toloui says.

Sponsored Content

“So we think because of this re-allocation, part of that is going to result in yield compression and rising currencies.”

 

Divergence in emerging markets

This year, capital flow research firm EPFR Global notes that movement into local currency emerging-market bond funds enjoyed nine weeks of positive flows up until the first week of April.

Toloui warns that traditional market-weighted bond indexes may, in fact, have a greater allocation to the biggest issuers of debt, namely developed-market economies, diminishing the defensive characteristics typically associated with government bonds.

The strong balance sheets of some emerging countries have meant they have more policy flexibility to deal with market uncertainty than many indebted industrialised countries, Toloui says.

“The key factors are the levels of external indebtedness and the debt-service payments relative to foreign reserves is absolutely essential,” he says.

According to Toloui, passive government-bond strategies that use traditional market-weighted bond indexes have a high allocation to the largest debt issuers, potentially diminishing the defensive characteristics typically associated with government bonds. Pimco prefers GDP-weighted indexes, which its research reveals results in an average gross government debt-to-GDP of 82 per cent across the countries in its government bond index. This compares to an average debt-to-GDP of 138 per cent for an equally weighted selection of three common market cap-weighted indexes.

He points to a necessary shift in the way bond investors should think about how industrialised and emerging-market countries perform in times of global economic stress.

“Traditionally in risky market conditions, you have industrialised-country bonds rally as central banks cut rates and emerging-market bonds face pressure because emerging markets had to raise rates to prevent capital flight and defend the currency,” Toloui says.

“Recently, however, there has been a big divergence in emerging markets with some countries, like Hungary and Turkey, falling into the old model of having to raise interest rates when there is capital flight, but other countries, like Brazil, being able to cut rates aggressively to shield their economies in periods of external stress.”

Brazilian two-year bond yields fell by more than 200 basis points in the second half of 2011, more than those in Germany and the US.

Italy, Turkey and Hungary saw bond yields rise by more than 200 basis points over the same time period.

 

Reconsider bond investments and asset allocation

Toloui makes the point in a new research article that investors who purchased Italian bonds a decade ago would have anticipated that yields compensated for interest rate risk – primarily the volatility of interest rates in the eurozone.

In contrast, purchasers of Brazilian bonds would have wanted a yield that compensated for the potential credit risk of Brazil not paying its debts. This is completely reversed in 2012, with investors perceiving credit risk in Italian bonds, while purchasers of Brazilian local currency debt would have been focused on central-bank policy and its impact on interest rates.

Pimco now makes the distinction between hard interest-rate durations, when yields on these bonds typically fall during times of market stress, and soft-credit duration, when yields rise during market stress.

“The old mental apparatus in investing in bonds seems to be reconsidered, and therefore the asset allocation needs to be re-considered,” Toloui says.

“Investment in emerging market bonds can provide income but can also provide some of the attractive qualities that bonds have in periods of volatility.”

Investors who structure a bond portfolio around the traditional dichotomy of developed markets representing hard-duration interest-rate risk and emerging-market soft-duration risk may, in fact, find they are holding assets that are acting like a credit risk, Toloui notes in his research.

He does, however, acknowledge that the financial markets of emerging markets are currently not deep or liquid enough to deal with large-scale capital in-flows that would result from global investors looking to allocate up to a third of their government-bond portfolios to emerging markets.

Pimco sees considerable first-mover advantage for investors who position themselves early to take advantage of the push into emerging-market debt, but Toloui warns that valuations may be bumpy.

“Positioning yourself there early is a way of taking advantage of the fact that we anticipate that there is going to be large capital flows going in as more investors allocate to these markets,” he says.

“In that journey, we are going to have periods where valuations are stretched where a lot of money moves in in a short period of time and we, as active managers, are trying to be mindful of that. Emerging markets are smaller. Navigating those markets is more difficult than it is in deep, liquid markets in industrial countries, but it does mean that getting there before others is especially important and also being sensitive to valuations as you are making your investments.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Not drowning, waving: quants on the comeback trail

Quantitative investing has taken a battering during the global financial crisis, with many big firms suffering lower-than-average performance for much of the past two years. But the stuff that gave quants a compelling story before  investor behavioural biases – is now helping them again. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

What’s the role of an asset consultant post crisis?

Asset consultants have recently started offering medium-term asset allocation advice, often as a separately priced service. Watson Wyatt Worldwide calls it “dynamic strategic asset allocation”. Russell Investments calls it “enhanced asset allocation”. Whatever the term, the advice sits between tactical asset allocation at the short end and strategic asset allocation at the long. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

QIA buys agribusiness, but not land, to feed Qatar

A food company owned by the $65 billion Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) has launched a joint venture in Sudan as part of its strategy to generate profit and secure food supply by investing in overseas agricultural businesses. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

What the world needs now: greater surveillance on exchange rates

The world needs to move back to a rules-based system of oversight over currencies and enhanced global surveillance of national macroeconomic policies, according to a leading Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford, UK. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

ING the latest to hive off funds management

Another big bank is set to hive off its funds management business to shore up its balance sheet, with this week’s announcement of the proposed divestments by ING Group. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

China’s CIC goes public with investment strategy

China Investment Corporation has for the first time revealed its investment strategy. SONIA HAN reports that the Chinese sovereign wealth fund has accelerated its investment program in open-market products and industries such as mining, energy and real estate. The CIC is seeing value after the crisis but is also looking to limit portfolio risk. mrec4inarticleinline

Previous