Outflows from emerging markets bonds and equities accelerated this past week, as expectations the US Federal Reserve will start withdrawing stimulus measures as early as next month led global investors to “fold their bets on a larger scale.”
Investors are believed to have pulled just under +$2b out of emerging market “equity” funds in the last week alone. That is more than double the amount that left the emerging market sector in the previous week.
In the bond category it’s a similar story. For the 13th consecutive week investors continue to pull monies from the bond funds in the tune of $1.3b, just under double the $834m that was liquidated the week before. The forex investor is very much shunning risks in the region and is happy to look at the USD in a more favorable light which is supported by a US yield curve that is backing up.
The fear that the Fed will begin tapering next month is making some investors worried that the “tide of money that has been flowing into the emerging markets over the past few years will diminish.” The fear that “helicopter” Ben and his fellow cohorts will begin tapering as early as next month should continue to ply outbound pressure on capital from the bond and equity funds in the emerging market. However, the outflow of funds is not on the same scale as what occurred in the region during late May and June. Investors pulled $37b from the region in June alone!
The forex market does not have the time to sit on its laurels. If anything, it needs to suck in a second wind and get ready for six consecutive weeks of event risks. In the US we have tapering, the debt ceiling and a new Fed Chairman to be chosen, in Europe Chancellor Merkel has the German elections to contend with, then there is Cyprus, Greece and Portugal decisions to be made. In Japan PM Abe is pushing his third policy arrow while trying to side step the emerging markets fallout. In the Middle East we have the Syrian civil war and Egypt to keep capital markets very much on its toes.
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WEEK AHEAD
* USD Durable Goods Orders
* USD Consumer Confidence
* EUR German Unemployment Change
* EUR German Consumer Price Index
* JPY National Consumer Price Index
* EUR Euro-Zone Consumer Price Index
* CAD Gross Domestic Product
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