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War Sparks Wall Street’s Rush to Commodity-Rich Emerging Markets - BLOOMBERG

MARCH 28, 2022

BY Sydney Maki and Netty Ismail


“Rising inflation, and more particularly food inflation, are giving emerging-market ministers of finance and central bankers growing headaches,” said Jean-Dominique Butikofer, head of emerging markets fixed income at Voya Investment Management.

He warned that the need to subsidize food prices will hit the budgets of commodity importers, especially as the risk of social unrest grows alongside households seeing their purchasing power diminish.

Nordea Investment has shifted its strategy accordingly to buy commodity exporters while selling importers, said Witold Bahrke, a Copenhagen-based senior macro strategist at the firm. He said they bought Colombia and sold Egypt.

Still, for Charlie Robertson, global chief economist for Renaissance Capital Ltd. in London, weakness in those importers might actually be an opportunity.

“What I’d be tempted to do would be to go very long energy importers: Pakistan, probably Turkey -- anybody who imports a lot of oil and is getting beaten now,” he said. “They’re cheap and getting cheaper, and it’s very easy from here to extrapolate deep deterioration.”

Other investors are playing it straight. Claudia Calich, a fund manager at M&G Investments, likes higher-yielding oil exporters in Africa and the Middle East, as well as Latin American credits that are tied to the U.S. economy, like Mexico.

Here are the main things to watch in emerging markets in the week ahead:

  • Investors will watch Sri Lanka’s gross-domestic product data for the final quarter of 2021 for clues on economic recovery after a contraction in the the third quarter.

  • Bank of Thailand will probably hold its key borrowing rate steady at 0.5% on Wednesday, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

  • While Russia’s activity data for February won’t capture much disruption from the invasion of Ukraine and subsequent sanctions, traders will monitor weekly price data for more clues on the environment in March.

  • In China, official manufacturing PMIs may show a setback for the economy after a strong first two months of the year, according to Bloomberg Economics.

  • Brazil is slated to release a slew of economic data, including industrial production figures and trade balance numbers.

  • Chile’s central bank will probably raise its key interest rate by 150 basis points to 7% on Tuesday, according to Bloomberg Economics, followed by a 150 basis point hike by Colombian policy makers expected on Thursday to 5.5%.

(Updates with edits throughout.)


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