(Bloomberg) — Strong demand from yield-hungry investors is driving a surge in developing-world bond sales as borrowers race to secure financing ahead of any further wobbles in global markets.
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Since the beginning of the year, emerging-market governments and companies have sold $331 billion in debt denominated in hard currencies like the dollar and euro, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That is the fastest pace in four years and already surpasses the total in the first half of 2024.
Investors have fueled a broad rally in international assets amid questions about the long-standing dominance of US markets, which have sent the value of the dollar down. Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. both forecast that EM assets should gain with a declining dollar, while Societe Generale said local assets in developing nations are going through a “goldilocks” moment.
The extra yield investors demand to hold dollar bonds from emerging countries over US Treasuries has fallen and is inches away from the lowest level since 2020, according to a JPMorgan index. But demand has held up because spreads are tighter in US markets as well.
“If you’re a CFO or treasurer you go when the window is open,” said Omotunde Lawal, head of EM corporate debt at Barings Investment Services. “If US fiscal concerns keep on the top of minds then US yields will push higher — so maybe best to issue now rather than later.”
A lack of clarity about the strength of the US economy is also leading many borrowers to issue bonds quickly in case there is more turmoil ahead, according to Stefan Weiler, the head of debt capital markets for Central Europe, the Middle East and Africa at JPMorgan in London.
“From a borrower perspective, the incentive of being patient has gone,” Weiler said. If there is a US recession, which JPMorgan assigns a 40% probability to, spreads would likely widen, making it more expensive for emerging markets to borrow, he added. “It’s really more about accessing the market when it’s available.”
The strong issuance began early in the year as developing nations around the world moved past a wave of post-pandemic defaults in 2024 and countries from Vietnam to Chile announced new economic reforms.
While there was a slowdown immediately after US President Donald Trump announced global tariffs in early April, causing volatility to skyrocket, the market for emerging bonds bounced back strongly after the threat of harsh levies faded. The lull may be short-lived as the administration is set to review tariff policies in early July.