FRONTIER PAIN "Frontier markets is where you'll likely see the brunt of the hit" of sharply rising rates, said Sahil Mahtani, multi-asset strategist at investment firm Ninety One. The number of smaller, riskier emerging markets where investors demand a premium of 10 percentage points or more over safe-haven U.S. Treasuries has remained broadly steady at around 30 countries, with a recent rally bringing no relief, analysts at Tellimer found. These countries, which include Kenya, Egypt and Pakistan, are essentially locked out of capital markets. But local fixed-income markets in bigger developing economies are also set to feel the pinch. A 6% Fed rate environment alongside still-hot inflation does make short-term rates in Chile and India as well as Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary most vulnerable, UBS found.
Flows to EMs soared in January but slowed to a crawl in February, signaling a warning to investors. Citi data showed on Monday that outflows resumed last week, with real money leaving Latin America and emerging Europe, the Middle East and Africa while hot money, or speculative capital, left Asia and Latam. Investors, especially on the equities side, could see China's reopening somewhat offsetting a looming downturn in the United States and some of Fed rates' historic weight on emerging markets. Emerging stocks are up just 2% this year after a combined 26% drop in the previous two and broadly lag developed peers. Chinese equities could provide a safe haven in a 6% fed funds rate scenario, UBS said. The emerging market universe being more Asia-centric than in previous sharp increases of global rates means that investors can't "look at the textbook of history" according to Nuno Fernandes, a New York-based portfolio manager for GW&K’s Emerging Wealth Equity Strategy. China accounts for nearly a third in the EM equity benchmark and near 5% in the fixed-income hard-currency index , which is supportive of the asset class. "Investors are conditioned to think that EM tail risk emerges in the context of aggressive U.S. rate hiking cycles," said Ninety One's Mahtani. "I think it's dangerous to say this time is different, but it feels like it's not that mechanical this time." (Reporting by Rodrigo Campos; additional reporting by Amruta Khandekar; editing by Karin Strohecker and Diane Craft)