I was quoted in a recent Globe & Mail article warning that higher yields available in emerging markets bonds (compared to Canada bonds) come with additional risk. Given that the investment fund industry has launched several emerging markets bond funds and exchange traded funds in recent years, it's worth putting my comments and this growing class of funds into context.
Canada's first generation EM bond funds If memory serves, this latest string of emerging markets bond fund launches is round two for the Canadian investment industry. When I started in the industry in 1994, emerging markets equities had just finished a year of triple-digit returns. But unlike today's focus on China and India, most of the enthusiasm back then zeroed in on Brazil and its Latin American counterparts. Fidelity and Guardian were two sponsors of first generation emerging markets bond funds.
But a Mexican Peso crisis in late 1994 began a string of mid-late 1990s emerging markets currency crises. They all put a dent in the market values of and infatuation with emerging markets bond (and equity) funds.
Fidelity Emerging Markets Bond Fund, for instance, was merged into its sibling, Fidelity American High Yield fund in 1999. Similarly, Fidelity North American Income (sold by many advisors as a foreign money market fund) was merged into Fidelity Canadian Short-Term Bond after its big Peso sent the fund's unit price southward.
Today's EM bond funds - the pitch Fast forward to today and there is a growing list of second-generation emerging markets bond mutual funds and ETFs. And the sales pitch is striking a more sensitive chord today. Developed countries the world over are up to their eyeballs in debt and sovereign default fears are abundant. Emerging markets, on the other hand, sport skinnier debt-to-GDP ratios and are looked at as global economic saviours. Accordingly, as developed nations are getting credit downgrades, emerging markets are being held out as safer credits.
But these supposedly safer credits are offering yields well in excess of bonds issued by more heavily-indebted developed nations. Venezuela is an interesting example. The country boasts a debt-to-GDP ratio of 39 per cent and has seen GDP growth north of 4 per cent year over year (according to TradingEconomics.com).
Yet 15-year Venezuelan bonds yield north of 12 per cent annually according to Bloomberg. Other Latin American government bonds yield 1 to 2 percentage points more than bonds issued by Canada, the U.S. and Germany.
Debt levels alone don't predict emerging markets defaults The sales pitch for emerging markets debt - like this one from RBC - might have us think that debt levels alone can be used to assess sovereign default risk. But judging by the 'spreads' of emerging markets bond yields above developed world sovereign debt, the global bond market is saying that other important factors determine default risk. Otherwise, emerging markets bonds would yield less than developed country debt.
In This Time is Different - Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff examined - among other things - a history of default among developing countries. While high debt levels were universally linked to default episodes, the authors found that emerging markets defaults have generally occurred at debt levels that are generally considered 'safe' for more mature economies.
They found that nearly half of the three-dozen emerging country defaults between 1970 and 2008 occurred at debt-to-GNP ratios below 35 percent. One recent illustration of this is Ecuador's 2008 default which occurred at a debt-to-GNP ratio of 20 percent.
While developed countries tend to run a higher risk of default at debt-to-GNP ratios above 60 per cent, history suggests that the danger zone for emerging markets typically starts at 35 per cent. While emerging markets countries boast lower overall debt levels, they also are less willing and less able to shoulder as much debt as their more developed peers.
Reinhart and Rogoff suggest that pinpointing any one country's debt intolerance threshold (or where the risk of default rises significantly) may largely be a function of a country's own history of default and inflation. In other words, the global bond market and the credit default swap market generally consider emerging markets higher default risks for good reasons.
Including emerging markets debt in portfolios Our firm has never explicitly included emerging markets debt as part of client portfolios. Those who can't resist the lure of this class of global bond should keep a few things in mind.
When determining allocation limits, include emerging markets bonds into the larger bucket of higher yield bonds. Common guidelines limit high yield (and in this case emerging markets) bonds to between 33 per cent and 50 per cent of total bond exposure. But for some investors the appropriate exposure might be zero. Whatever the case, all investment policy guidelines should be driven by individual goals - which can't be stressed enough.
Too many investors and their advisors will gravitate to emerging markets bonds because of the lure of the sales pitch and the returns in recent years. Our approach is to build portfolios with 'core' and 'enhancement' building blocks. We begin with 'core' exposure; and only when that is insufficient to achieve stated goals do we introduce 'enhancement' strategies - like higher yield bonds - to juice portfolio return potential.
Those simply chasing returns, however, tend to have unrealistic expectations - which is bound to end in disappointment.
Dan Hallett, CFA, CFP, is director of asset management for HighView Financial Group and a contributor to thewealthsteward.com. He has spent more than a dozen years doing research on investment funds, portfolio managers and financial markets. Formerly the president of Dan Hallett and Associates Inc. in Windsor, he is now responsible for manager research, portfolio construction and investment program design at HighView. Mr. Hallett has a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the Odette School of Business at the University of Windsor.