Home / News / How Aussie investors can smooth yields from EM debt

How Aussie investors can smooth yields from EM debt

News

Paul McNamara
Australian investors are in a better position than most to incorporate emerging market debt within their portfolios because they can take advantage of the close correlation between emerging market currencies and the Aussie dollar. A new research note shows how this works.
According to global manager GAM, when Australian investors leave unhedged their emerging market debt strategy, the return volatility is lower than in ‘hard-currency’ bonds and equal to that of global bonds.
GAM has produced a research note, ‘Emerging Market Debt for the AUD Investor’, which also points out that emerging market (local currency) yields are currently higher relative to AUD yields than at any time since at least 2003.
The research note was written by Paul McNamara, investment director, and Michael Biggs, investment manager, of GAM’s emerging markets bond team.
The authors say: “We believe that the characteristics of the EM local currency rates asset class for AUD investors are possibly misunderstood. If the returns are considered in USD terms (or hedged into AUD), the returns on EM local rates are more volatile than the returns on either EM hard currency bonds or global bonds.
“The local currency rates asset class is unique in that EM FX is very closely correlated with the AUD. For all the other asset classes we considered, return volatility increases if the returns are not hedged. In the case of local currency rates, the return volatility declines. If local currency rates are received one-third hedged rather than fully hedged, by our estimates the volatility of returns declines well below EM hard currency debt and is comparable (slightly below) to global bonds.
“The question of volatility is particularly relevant at present, as EM yields spread relative to AUD bonds have reached 15-year highs.”

Investor Strategy News




  • Print Article

    Related
    APRA’s governance move could trigger wholesale change

    If the regulator’s proposal to limit board tenure to 10 years takes effect, then many non-executive board members will be in the firing line, with industry funds likely to have the most casualties.

    Nicholas Way | 7th Mar 2025 | More
    ATO has family offices in its sights over succession strategies

    The wealth transfer from Baby Boomers to their offspring, which is in full swing, has got the taxman’s full attention, especially as it pertains to capital gains payments, trust structures and potential breaches of the Tax Act’s Division 7A.

    Duncan Hughes | 27th Feb 2025 | More
    Don’t fear the ‘Trump effect’ in emerging markets: Ninety One

    The set-up for emerging markets is better than ever, and harks back to the beginning of their decade-long run following the end of the Asian financial crisis. And while Trump has investors running scared, fears about another brushfire trade war are overblown.

    Lachlan Maddock | 21st Feb 2025 | More
    Popular