Investors that were early to identify the attractive valuations following the volatility in emerging market bonds in early 2014 are still sitting atop a pile of gains, yet in recent months new investors haven’t experienced the same steady uptrend.
Partly due to the slack in the credit markets domestically, bonds in emerging markets have largely moved sideways in a 2% range over the past few months. The seemingly endless uptrend in the U.S. dollar has been weighing heavily on retail interest for foreign assets, even those that are in fact already denominated in U.S. Dollars.
While it’s impossible to know just how far the dollar can climb, or how long emerging market bond volatility will persist, I believe keeping them on your radar with a plan to add during the recent consolidation could pay off in the intermediate term.
Judging by the recent price action in two of the largest U.S.-dollar-denominated emerging market bond index ETFs — the iShares Emerging Market Bond Fund (EMB) and the Powershares EM Sovereign Debt Portfolio (PCY) — it’s clear both funds are mired with indecision.
A Closer Look at Emerging Market Bonds
From a technical perspective, the lows established in the broad channel dating back to mid-June have not been breached on the downside, further contending that EM bonds could have firm support. However, in the near term, it appears that channel is narrowing, which can lead to break down or break out, and in turn cause a fast move as a result of some unknown catalyst.
The funds have largely worked off any intermediate overbought tendencies, as each is toggling above and below its 50-day moving average.
From a fundamental perspective, EM bonds seemingly have everything going for them, including a decently buoyant equity market, a stable interest rate environment and election cycle fatigue that has largely passed. Furthermore, EM bonds still present better value and yield when compared to corporate securities issued in the U.S. with similar credit ratings.