[Mb-civic] Buttonwood The end of the affair?

Michael Butler michael at michaelbutler.com
Wed Jan 26 11:40:54 PST 2005


            
    

    

Buttonwood

The end of the affair?
Jan 25th 2005
>From The Economist Global Agenda


Emerging-market debt has been a sweetheart deal over the past three years.
It is almost time to move on


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BUTTONWOOD having sensibly decided to go off and earn some real money, the
search for his successor was long and arduous. The gene pool of those
equally familiar with capital markets and Claire’s Accessories is not
enormous, but the challenge was met. On detail, Buttonwood II is long dogs
rather than cats and prefers four-hooved to four-wheeled transport; but she
shares with her predecessor an interest in the high-yield end of the bond
market—more specifically, emerging-market debt.

One spectacle that is always guaranteed to push up investors’ blood pressure
is an Argentine government road show, and the current one is no exception.
With some $81 billion (not counting unpaid interest) of the world’s biggest
defaulted debt to swap, the country’s finance team is trotting its
unappealing offer around the world, leaving bondholders howling. The
proposed “haircut” remains somewhere north of 70%, depending on how you
calculate it: US marine-like. So last week the Not The Argentine Road Show
swung into action in London. Representing 30,000 investors holding $1.2
billion in debt, the Argentine Bond Restructuring Agency (ABRA)—part of a
broader coalition—argues that Argentina could and should double its offer.

It could, but it won’t. The price of Argentina’s debt in the secondary
market is around 32 cents (per dollar of debt outstanding), which suggests
that this may in fact be what it is worth. Argentina’s public-relations
skills are lamentable and its negotiating skills even worse, but its case is
not without merit. Though the country’s economy grew by 8% last year and may
see another 5% this year, output remains lower than in 1998. If the swap
goes through, Argentina will still be left servicing a public debt equal to
80-90% of GDP, far more than Brazil, say.

Argentina says it will consider the swap a success if 50% of bondholders
participate; the IMF (which, incidentally, is owed an additional $13.8
billion) wants 75%; the result will probably be between the two. Up to 40%
of the debt is held by Argentines, for a start, and institutions there will
settle. The professional, mainly foreign, investors who bought the bonds
after default at 20 cents or so on the dollar will still make money after
the haircut, especially if Argentine bonds move up in price as a result,
which is likely. The sort of legal action that some bondholders are
threatening is not promising, as recent judgments against Argentina in
America have failed to produce a single seizeable asset. And a certain
fatigue may be setting in, which the Bad Boy of the Pampas is counting on.
The offer expires in mid-February.

The broader emerging-market debt story lies elsewhere, however, and it is
very different. Brazil quietly raised a tidy ten-year €500m in euros,
tightly priced, while Argentina was fighting with its creditors last week.
For at least two years, with returns on Treasuries and other top-grade
credits scant, investors have chased yield down every risky path, many of
them far-flung. Now, however, investors may have to start going straight.
Alan Greenspan warned in the Federal Reserve Open-Market Committee minutes
published in January that he would know what to do if they didn’t. Some
selling-off of riskier assets resulted. And analysts at securities firms,
including Citigroup Smith Barney and Merrill Lynch, are writing that
investors indeed feel more risk-averse than they did.

But there is nothing like a rout—in fact, quite the contrary. If forecasts
by the Institute for International Finance (IIF), a Washington-based
think-tank, are correct, private capital flows to emerging markets ($279
billion in 2004) will remain strong in 2005. True, much of that is direct
investment, as opposed to the portfolio kind, and bound for the two “special
cases”, China and Russia. But the IIF reckons that non-bank credit flows
(mainly bonds) will fall back only $8 billion from their seven-year high
last year of $65 billion. Other figures confirm the trend. Emerging
Portfolio Fund Research, a firm based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, says that
the emerging-market bond funds it tracks have seen solid net inflows for the
past 12 weeks.

If investors are going off risk, why are they still keen on emerging
markets? Many believe that these markets are not very risky any more. Most
countries on J.P. Morgan’s EMBI+ (Emerging Markets Bond Index) are profiting
from economic growth, high commodity prices, cheap money and broadly more
sensible fiscal policies. A number are delinking from the dollar and
diversifying the range of currencies in which they borrow (viz Brazil). They
are also diversifying their sources of financing by raising more money in
their domestic markets (Brazil again, and Mexico). The ratings agencies have
rewarded many of them with upgrades. Over half of the issuers in the EMBI+
index now have investment-quality ratings.

There are other reasons, too, why emerging-market bonds continue to attract.
Cash is sloshing around the system at the moment, and debt issuance has been
fairly restrained. In certain markets (eg, China) investors are betting on a
currency revaluation. But the basic reason is that investing in places like
Ecuador, Thailand or Kazakhstan is no longer seen as taking a walk on the
wild side. Accordingly, the spreads on emerging-market debt over Treasuries
have come right down, as the chart shows.


But these tight spreads may not really be compensating investors for the
extra risk, even if that risk looks reduced in the current economic
conditions. Few expect big shocks from within the emerging markets
themselves, though there are pockets of poor quality such as the
Philippines, which wants to raise $1 billion this week. But there are many
risks out there threatening not just high-yield markets but the whole
investment climate: for a start, America’s twin deficits, the prospect of
slowing world growth and the possibility of more corporate scandals shaking
investors’ confidence.

The big question for high-yield debt is how soon and how sharply American
interest rates move up, pulling investment into Treasuries and other
low-risk securities and driving up yields generally. The consensus,
reflected in current spreads, is that rates will rise gradually and emerging
markets hold firm at least through the end of 2005.

But investors ignore the possibility of other kinds of bad news at their
peril. Buttonwood II has lived in various exotic locations in recent years,
and if there is one thing she knows, it is that most investors in New York
and London haven’t a clue what companies and governments are up to in
two-thirds of the globe. Transparency is not second nature east of Suez, or
indeed south of the Rio Grande. The end of this particular affair should be
anticipated.

Send comments on this article to Buttonwood (Please state whether you are
happy for your comments to be published)

Read more Buttonwood columns at www.economist.com/buttonwood


Copyright © 2005 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group. All rights
reserved.




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