‘The Impulses Turn Negative’: Goldman Warns On Emerging Markets

We’ve written a ton here lately about the exceedingly long-in-the-tooth rally in all things emerging markets.

The space’s YTD outperformance makes sense on some levels but flies in the face of reason on others.

Yes, the carry trader’s paradise created by DM central banks and the attendant global hunt for yield is in many respects the only thing that matters. It’s the controlling factor. The proximate cause.

But EM is, well, EM. Which means that all of the fine print still applies.

There’s idiosyncratic political risk that may or may not spill over to the entire complex when it flares up in one country or another (Brazil and Turkey being great examples).

There’s the risk that the entire space could be destabilized with one misstep on China’s tightrope walk where staying in balance means deleveraging without choking off credit to the economy.

There are commodity prices to worry about.

And, perhaps most importantly, there’s the possibility that DM policy normalization will turn inflows into outflows from EM assets that have benefited from an influx of cash.

On that latter point, it’s worth noting that the iShares JPMorgan USD Emerging Markets Bond ETF suffered $1.2 billion in outflows over two weeks earlier this month, a stretch which erased more than a quarter of the fund’s YTD inflows:

EMB

Well, one other critical factor to consider is growth – or, more importantly, the growth impulse.

“Emerging market assets tend to outperform their developed market peers when the growth differential between EM and DM widens, and vice-versa during periods of a declining differential,” Goldman wrote, in a note out Friday.

EMGRowth

That’s equities. Needless to say, the same generally holds true for credit and FX (the following charts plot spreads and EM FX against Goldman’s current activity indicator for EM):

CAI

So given that, what’s the outlook going forward?

According to Goldman, the answer is “cautious” if you consider the impact exogenous factors have on EM growth. Here’s a bit more:

Over the past 18 months, the EM ex-China CAI has accelerated by roughly 2.8pp and, according to our model, the impulse from better DM growth, higher commodity prices and looser financial conditions accounted for roughly half (1.4pp) of that acceleration.

As our model captures up to six months’ worth of impact to EM growth from macro factors, we find this exercise a useful barometer for how current shifts (changes over the past 1-2 months) in the external environment are likely to impact EM growth in 2H.

Over the past two months, commodity prices have declined roughly 6%, DM FCIs have been flat (although they have tightened 10bp over the past two weeks) and, after a strong 1Q in which DM CAIs accelerated 50bp, DM activity has been flat. Hence, despite the very supportive Q1 data, the recent moderation (which affects the data over the next six months) suggests that the impulse to EM growth should switch from a ‘strong positive’ in 1H 2017 to a ‘soft negative’ in 2H 2017.

EMGrowth

So add that to the laundry list of reasons to be concerned about an imminent correction in EM.

And if you’re in EM credit via ETFs, don’t forget that when the shit hits the proverbial fan, you’re going to find out what the definition of “liquidity mismatch” is.

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2 thoughts on “‘The Impulses Turn Negative’: Goldman Warns On Emerging Markets

  1. The communists just said they are going to take a ” more active” role in “economic stabilization “. Given the timing on that, holy cow.

  2. Heisenberg, I couldn’t but notice your 2nd chart shows the beginning of an EM bull cycle. Of the previous 3 bulls on the chart, the shortest was 8 years long. Doesn’t that suggest something positive about EM?

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