On the vulnerability of local emerging debt markets

A new IMF paper provides evidence that increased foreign participation in local-currency emerging debt markets has made these significantly more vulnerable to foreign interest rate and risk shocks. Concentration of the investor base and poor economic fundamentals appear to amplify such vulnerability.

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The four components of long-term bond yields

A BOJ paper proposes an affine terms structure model for bond yields under consideration of the zero lower bound. It estimates the contribution of [i] expected real rates, [ii] real term premia, [iii] expected inflation rates, and [iv] inflation risk premia. In the U.S. yields have been driven mainly by expected real rates and real term premia in recent years. In Japan inflation expectations and inflation/deflation risk premia have played a greater role.

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The dangers of ultra-low interest rates in Europe

Negative nominal interest rates and term premia are an issue for financial stability in Europe, according to a recent speech by the Deputy General Manager of the BIS. Duration risk has surged and banks’ exposure to sovereign credit and long-term rates has been compounded by flawed capital regulation. Governments find it easier to live with high debt levels for now, but at the expense of a weaker financial position of insurance companies and pension funds.

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The global systemic consequences of Solvency II

The new European insurance regulation will be introduced in 2016 with important consequences for the global financial system. A paper by Avinash Persaud argues that Solvency II introduces an undue bias against assets with high market and liquidity risk, such as equity. Meanwhile it encourages excessive holdings of low-yielding sovereign and high-grade bonds. (more…)

The fall of inflation compensation

A new IJCB article shows that historically [i] inflation expectations had a strong impact on long-term yields and [ii] economic data surprises had a strong impact on inflation expectations. However, the influence of compensation for inflation and inflation risk on U.S. bond yields has faded in the era of non-conventional monetary policy.

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FX risk and local EM bond yields

A BIS paper shows significant positive correlation of implied FX volatility and local EM bond yields. Empirically the causality runs mostly from FX to bonds, probably because currency risk is a key factor of foreign bond holdings. However, there can also be reverse causality, when FX derivatives are used as proxy hedge in a bond market turmoil. Since FX volatility is stationary, extreme values can indicate value in local EM bonds.

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The dangerous slide in global real interest rates

Various research contributions suggest that the global decline in real interest rates may be self-reinforcing. That is because low real rates spur leverage, debt, and resource misallocations. This gradually lowers the natural rate of interest of the economy. Yet when the natural rate falls, the policy-influenced actual real rate must fall alongside, merely to avoid a tightening of financial conditions. At the zero lower bound this can lead to distress.

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The 1×1 of financial repression

Financial repression is a policy that channels cheap funding to governments, typically supported by accommodative monetary policy. After the global financial crisis various forms of financial repression have prevailed in most developed and many emerging countries. These policies have been effective in containing public debt but bear risks for future financial stability.

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Why bond yield compression cannot easily be reversed

Non-conventional monetary policy has inflated central banks’ balance sheets and compressed long-term yields. A new BIS paper makes some points on why reversing this portfolio effect is problematic. The financial system has much greater exposure to government bond yield risk than in the past. Spillover risks for private debt and emerging markets are elevated. And conflicts may arise between central bank and public debt management policies, increasing uncertainty for markets.

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Developed market bond yields and systemic EM risk

A new BIS paper argues that the expansion of EM local-currency bond markets and foreign-currency EM corporate issuance have strengthened the link between local EM financial conditions and global bond yields. The consequences would be (i) increased dependence of emerging financial systems on developed countries’ non-conventional monetary policies, (ii) decreased effectiveness of local monetary policies, and (iii) new systemic risks.

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