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    Home » Small emerging market dollar bonds resume selloff, Pakistan drops more than 6 cents
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    Small emerging market dollar bonds resume selloff, Pakistan drops more than 6 cents

    userBy userApril 9, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
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    By Colleen Goko and Duncan Miriri

    JOHANNESBURG/NAIROBI (Reuters) – International bonds issued by smaller, riskier, emerging economies suffered another sharp selloff on Wednesday after President Donald Trump’s eye-watering 104% tariffs on China took effect, re-igniting turmoil across global markets.

    Pakistan’s longer-dated dollar-denominated bonds tumbled more than 6 cents to be bid below the 70-cent threshold where debt is seen as distressed, Tradeweb data showed.

    Longer-dated bonds, issued by Sri Lanka, Nigeria and Egypt, were all down between 3.5-4.5 cents, although trading was thin, according to market participants.

    Debt in smaller emerging markets, known as frontier markets, has suffered sharp selloffs since Trump announced a raft of sweeping tariffs last Wednesday, with many bonds in the asset class losing 10 cents or more over the past week.

    The latest rout is boosting the cost of borrowing for those economies sharply, with many of the bonds seeing their yields in the double digits, a threshold that makes it unpalatable for them to tap international capital markets.

    “There are some concerns in the market that Frontiers will find it more difficult in the future to raise external funding due to the external market developments and possibly persistent loss in risk appetite,” said Gergely Urmossy, senior frontier markets strategist at Societe Generale.

    This could lead to more currency weakness in those economies over the medium term and curtail the space for central banks to lower interest rates to shore up their economies, he added.

    Many frontier market governments, especially African sovereigns, had only recently returned to Eurobond markets.

    They had lost access for some two years when the fallout from COVID-19 and Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine sent inflation sharply higher and fuelled a global interest rate-hiking cycle that priced those governments out, and helped push Ghana and Zambia into default.

    Razia Khan, head of research, Africa and the Middle East at Standard Chartered said the latest set of tariffs had fuelled more concerns over global growth.

    “Frontier markets, especially at the lower end of the ratings spectrum, are seen as more vulnerable when risk-off sentiment grips markets,” she said.

    (Reporting by Karin Strohecker, Colleen Goko and Duncan Miriri, writing by Karin Strohecker; Editing by Amanda Cooper and Sharon Singleton)



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