Emerging currencies, stocks face more losses as China slows

Business Friday 01/January/2016 18:47 PM
By: Times News Service
Emerging currencies, stocks face more losses as China slows

Kuala Lumpur: Emerging-market currencies slumped this year by the most since 1997, and analysts are forecasting further losses in 2016 as China’s economy slows and the United States raises interest rates.
The deteriorating sentiment also hurt stocks and bonds, with an index of equities covering developing countries posting the biggest annual drop since 2011. The premium investors demand to hold emerging-market sovereign debt widened for an unprecedented third year after the US Federal Reserve took the long-awaited move of tightening monetary policy and signaled more to come.
The deteriorating sentiment also hurt stocks and bonds, with an index of equities covering developing countries posting the biggest annual drop since 2011. The premium investors demand to hold emerging-market sovereign debt widened for an unprecedented third year after the US Federal Reserve took the long-awaited move of tightening monetary policy and signaled more to come.
UBS and Citigroup strategists said this month that more pain is coming because developing markets haven’t fallen enough to reflect subdued global growth. A slump in commodities that pushed down the price of Brent crude is also damping confidence as economists forecast China, the world’s second- biggest economy and a major buyer of raw materials, will slow further in 2016.
“Fundamentally, none of the emerging-market currencies are going to buck against the tide of a stronger dollar,” said Sim Moh Siong, a foreign-exchange strategist at Bank of Singapore. “The focus for the Fed has shifted from lift-off to the next rate hike. We could be stuck in the low-for-longer scenario for commodity prices.”
Exchange rates
A measure of 20 developing-nation exchange rates depreciated 15 per cent in 2015, the steepest slide since the 1997 Asian financial crisis, when it slumped 23 per cent. All but six of the 24 emerging-market currencies tracked are expected to weaken again in the next 12 months, with Argentina’s peso, the Brazilian real and the Indonesian rupiah seen falling the most, according to data. The former two led losses this year after wiping out at least a third of their value.
The Bloomberg Commodity Index tracking 22 raw materials sank 25 per cent this year, while Brent crude plunged 35 per cent. China’s gross domestic product is forecast to increase 6.5 per cent in 2016, slowing from an estimated 6.9 per cent in 2015, the weakest pace in 25 years, according to a survey of economists.
“It will continue to be highly volatile,” Nathan Griffiths, a senior emerging-market equities manager who helps oversee $1.2 billion at NN Investment Partners in The Hague, said by e-mail. “The main risk remains the Chinese economy. This is the biggest driver of global trade and emerging markets, and an inability to stabilize will drive emerging-market GDP lower again."
The direction of currencies also remains a “big threat” for equities, he said. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index retreated 17 per cent in 2015. Chinese shares traded in Hong Kong and equities in Brazil, Colombia, Turkey and Egypt were among the biggest decliners this year. The measure is valued at 11 times projected 12-month earnings. The MSCI World Index fell 2.7 per cent this year and is valued at a multiple of 15.7.
Turkey turmoil
All 10 industry gauges in the developing-nation index fell in 2015, led by declines of 20 per cent or more in energy, financial, telecommunications, utility and raw-material companies.
The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index was little changed Thursday after falling 1.3 per cent on Wednesday, paring this year’s decline to 19 per cent. Markets in South Korea, Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand were closed for holidays.
The Borsa Istanbul 100 Index fell 2 pe rcent on Thursday. The Turkish equity benchmark sank 16 per cent in a year marked by political turmoil and a deterioration in security due to the conflict in neighboring Syria. The Dubai Financial Market General Index was little changed, setting its 2015 loss at 17 per cent as countries in the oil-exporting Gulf Cooperation Council suffered the brunt of the slump in the price of crude. The Tadawul All Share Index in Riyadh slid 17 percent this year, the most since 2008.
Currencies
“China’s slowdown, combined with the fear of Fed rate hikes as well as price weakness in commodities led to quite a bad year for emerging-market investors who didn’t look for a niche market,” Attila Vajda, managing director of Project Asia Research & Consulting, a Singapore-based advisory firm, said from Ho Chi Minh City. “Investors should cherry pick and not treat all EM markets as being the same.”
In Asia, currencies weakened this year mainly due to capital outflows in anticipation of higher US interest rates and the impact from China’s economic slowdown. Malaysia’s ringgit led the losses with a 19 per cent decline as the slide in Brent crude also cut government revenue for the region’s only major net oil exporter. It was the worst annual performance since 1997. Indonesia’s rupiah dropped 10 per cent, the Thai baht depreciated almost 9 per cent and South Korea’s won lost 6.3 per cent. The rupiah, won and Taiwan’s dollar are forecast to lead declines in 2016.
Argentina’s peso plunged 35 per cent this year after the country abandoned the currency’s peg to the dollar. The Brazilian real retreated 33 percent amid a corruption scandal that began at the state-run oil producer Petroleo Brasileiro, credit-rating downgrades and a political crisis that left the nation’s president facing impeachment proceedings.
The Turkish lira fell for the third straight year, as did the Russian ruble, which has erased almost 60 per cent of its value since the end of 2012 due to oil’s slide and sanctions over the conflict in Ukraine.
US dollar on a high
United States dollar is outperforming all of its 16 major peers in 2015 after the UD Federal Reserve began its first interest-rate-raising cycle in almost a decade.
A gauge of the US currency is poised for a third year of gains after central bank policy makers deemed the economy strong enough to merit boosting rates from virtually zero. The yen is headed for a record fourth annual decline, while the euro slumped a second year, as stimulus in Japan and the euro area widened the gap between monetary policy in those regions and the US.