Robeco logo

Disclaimer

1. General
Please read this information carefully.

This website is prepared and issued by Robeco Hong Kong Limited ("Robeco"), which is a corporation licensed by the Securities and Futures Commission in Hong Kong to engage in Type 1 (dealing in securities); Type 2 (dealing in futures contracts); Type 4 (advising in securities) and Type 9 (asset management) regulated activities. The Company does not hold client assets and is subject to the licensing condition that it shall seek the SFC’s prior approval before extending services at retail level. This website has not been reviewed by the Securities and Futures Commission or any regulatory authority in Hong Kong.

2. Important risk disclosures
Important risk disclosures Robeco Capital Growth Funds (“the Funds”) are distinguished by their respective specific investment policies or any other specific features. Please read carefully for the risks of the Funds:

  • Some Funds are subject to investment, market, equities, liquidity, counterparty, securities lending and foreign currency risk and risk associated with investments in small and/or mid-capped companies.

  • Some Funds are subject to the risks of investing in emerging markets which include political, economic, legal, regulatory, market, settlement, execution, counterparty and currency risks.

  • Some Funds may invest in China A shares directly through the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (“QFII”) scheme and / or RMB Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (“RQFII”) scheme and / or Stock Connect programmes which may entail additional clearing and settlement, regulatory, operational, counterparty and liquidity risk.

  • For distributing share classes, some Funds may pay out dividend distributions out of capital. Where distributions are paid out of capital, this amounts to a return or withdrawal of part of your original investment or capital gains attributable to that and may result in an immediate decrease in the net asset value of shares.

  • Some Funds’ investments maybe concentrated in one region / one country / one sector / around one theme and therefore the value of the Fund may be more volatile and may be subject to concentration risk.

  • The risk exists that the quantitative techniques used by some Funds may not work and the Funds’ value may be adversely affected.

  • In addition to investment, market, liquidity, counterparty, securities lending, (reverse) repurchase agreements and foreign currency risk, some Funds are subject to risk associated with fixed income investments like credit risk, interest rate risk, convertible bonds risk, ABS risk and the risk of investments in non-investment grade or unrated securities and the risk of investments made in non-investment grade sovereign securities.

  • Some Funds can use derivatives extensively. Robeco Global Consumer Trends Equities can use derivatives for hedging and efficient portfolio management. Derivatives exposure may involve higher counterparty, liquidity and valuation risks. In adverse situations, the Funds may suffer significant losses (even a total loss of the Funds’ assets) from its derivative usage.

  • Robeco European High Yield Bonds is subject to Eurozone risk.

  • Investors may suffer substantial losses of their investments in the Funds. Investor should not invest in the Funds solely based on the information provided in this document and should read the offering documents (including potential risks involved) for details.

3. Local legal and sales restrictions
The Website is to be accessed by “professional investors” only (as defined in the Securities and Futures Ordinance (Cap.571) and/or the Securities and Futures (Professional Investors) Rules (Cap.571D) under the laws of Hong Kong). The Website is not directed at any person in any jurisdiction where (by reason of that person’s nationality, residence or otherwise) the publication or availability of the Website is prohibited. Persons in respect of whom such prohibitions apply or persons other than those specified above must not access this Website. Persons accessing the Website need to be aware that they are responsible themselves for the compliance with all local rules and regulations. By accessing this Website and any of its pages, you acknowledge your agreement with understanding of the following terms of use and legal information. If you do not agree to the terms and conditions below, do not access this Website or any pages thereof.

The information contained in the Website is being provided for information purposes.

Neither information nor any opinion expressed on the Website constitutes a solicitation, an offer or a recommendation to buy, sell or dispose of any investment, to engage in any other transaction or to provide any investment advice or service. The information contained in the Website does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation and was prepared without regard to the specific objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular person who may receive it. An investment in a Robeco product should only be made after reading the related legal documents such as management regulations, prospectuses, most recent annual and semi-annual reports, which can be all be obtained free of charge at www.robeco.com/hk/en and at the Robeco Hong Kong office.

4. Use of the Website
The information is based on certain assumptions, information and conditions applicable at a certain time and may be subject to change at any time without notice. Robeco aims to provide accurate, complete and up-to-date information, obtained from sources of information believed to be reliable. Persons accessing the Website are responsible for their choice and use of the information.

5. Investment performance
No assurance can be given that the investment objective of any investment products will be achieved. No representation or promise as to the performance of any investment products or the return on an investment is made. The value of your investments may fluctuate. The value of the assets of Robeco investment products may also fluctuate as a result of the investment policy and/or the developments on the financial markets. Results obtained in the past are no guarantee for the future. Past performance, projection, or forecast included in this Website should not be taken as an indication or guarantee of future performance, and no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made regarding future performance. Fund performance figures are based on the month-end trading prices and are calculated on a total return basis with dividends reinvested. Return figures versus the benchmark show the investment management result before management and/or performance fees; the fund returns are with dividends reinvested and based on net asset values with prices and exchange rates of the valuation moment of the benchmark.

Investments involve risks. Past performance is not a guide to future performance. Potential investors should read the terms and conditions contained in the relevant offering documents and in particular the investment policies and the risk factors before any investment decision is made. Investors should ensure they fully understand the risks associated with the fund and should also consider their own investment objective and risk tolerance level. Investors are reminded that the value and income (if any) from shares of the fund may be volatile and could change substantially within a short period of time, and investors may not get back the amount they have invested in the fund. If in doubt, please seek independent financial and professional advice.

6. Third party websites
This website includes material from third parties or links to websites maintained by third parties some of which is supplied by companies that are not affiliated to Robeco. Following links to any other off-site pages or websites of third parties shall be at the own risk of the person following such link. Robeco has not reviewed any of the websites linked to or referred to by the Website and does not endorse or accept any responsibility for their content nor the products, services or other items offered through them. Robeco shall have no liability for any losses or damages arising from the use of or reliance on the information contained on websites of third parties, including, without limitation, any loss of profit or any other direct or indirect damage. Third party off-site pages or websites are provided for informational purposes only.

7. Limitation of liability
Robeco as well as (possible) other suppliers of information to the Website accept no responsibility for the contents of the Website or the information or recommendations contained herein, which moreover may be changed without notice.

Robeco assumes no responsibility for ensuring, and makes no warranty, that the functioning of the Website will be uninterrupted or error-free. Robeco assumes no responsibility for the consequences of e-mail messages regarding a Robeco (transaction) service, which either cannot be received or sent, are damaged, received or sent incorrectly, or not received or sent on time.

Neither will Robeco be liable for any loss or damage that may result from access to and use of the Website.

8. Intellectual property
All copyrights, patents, intellectual and other property, and licenses regarding the information on the Website are held and obtained by Robeco. These rights will not be passed to persons accessing this information.

9. Privacy
Robeco guarantees that the data of persons accessing the Website will be treated confidentially in accordance with prevailing data protection regulations. Such data will not be made available to third parties without the approval of the persons accessing the Website, unless Robeco is legally obliged to do so. Please find more details in our Privacy and Cookie Policy.

10. Applicable law
The Website shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of Hong Kong. All disputes arising out of or in connection with the Website shall be submitted to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of Hong Kong.

Please click the “I agree” button if you have read and understood this page and agree to the Disclaimers above and the collection and use of your personal data by Robeco, for the purposes for which such data is collected and used as set out in the Privacy and Cookie Policy, including for the purpose of direct marketing of Robeco products or services. Otherwise, please click “I Disagree” to leave the website.

I Disagree

26-03-2025 · Insight

Exploring emerging markets debt: Bond voyage?

During the past two decades, returns in the emerging markets debt space have experienced significant swings.

    Authors

  • Laurens Swinkels - Head of Solutions Research

    Laurens Swinkels

    Head of Solutions Research

  • Diliana Deltcheva - Head of Emerging Market Debt

    Diliana Deltcheva

    Head of Emerging Market Debt

  • João Gabriel Giesta de Mello Fernandes - Investments Analyst

    João Gabriel Giesta de Mello Fernandes

    Investments Analyst

Summary

  1. The emerging markets debt (EMD) asset class has surpassed USD 8 tln mark

  2. Local-currency EMD had a lost decade due to a strong US dollar, but is currently valued cheaply

  3. Both hard-currency and local-currency EMD can be attractive additions to multi-asset portfolios

All EMD segments had a stellar performance until the taper tantrum in 2013, when they started underperforming. The sluggish performance of the past decade is likely not representative of the coming years, when both the hard- and local-currency sovereign segments can be attractive diversifiers relative to conventional asset classes.

Figure 1 - Development of the market capitalization of emerging markets debt by segment

Figure  1 - Development of the market capitalization of emerging markets debt by segment

Source: Robeco, JP Morgan, Bloomberg.

EMD as an asset class has grown spectacularly over the past two decades, reaching a market capitalization above USD 8 tln at the end of 2024, about 11% of the global bond market. 1,2 Figure 1 shows that the local-currency government bond segment has grown the fastest and it is currently valued at more than USD 5 tln in terms of the used market value definition. The hard-currency government segment has not grown as much and has hovered around USD 1 tln for a couple of years. Many large countries, such as Brazil, China, and India have been able to issue government debt in local currency, meaning they no longer rely solely on the narrower hard-currency funding. Hard-currency corporate debt has also surpassed USD 1 tln, while inflation-linked debt in emerging markets is currently about half of that. To put this in perspective, the global corporate high yield market is about USD 2 tln.

Risks and returns in emerging markets debt segments

The growth of local-currency markets is primarily due to a few large countries that dominate the capitalization-weighted market. Moreover, several countries have capital controls that make it cumbersome to invest in their government bond markets for international investors. To reduce these challenges, benchmark indices are often constrained to those countries with sufficiently accessible and tradable bond markets. Additionally, the weight in the most widely used EMD indices is capped at 10% for local-currency markets and 5% for hard-currency markets that tend to have somewhat more risky constituents.3 The USD 8 trn from Figure 1 drops to USD 3 tln after these adjustments have been made. Figure 2 shows the average returns and volatility risk over the period January 2003 (the first month we have returns of the local-currency EMD segment) to January 2025.4 For the purpose of comparison we have included conventional asset classes that make up most of the global market portfolio.

Figure 2 – Average returns and volatility risk, January 2003 to January 2025

Figure  2 – Average returns and volatility risk, January 2003 to January 2025

Source: Robeco, JP Morgan, Bloomberg, MSCI. Returns and volatility annualized from monthly data. Returns in US dollars.

Figure 2 shows that global corporate high yield and developed equity markets have performed exceptionally well over this period. The returns of hard-currency EMD, both government and corporate, are in line, but unhedged local-currency EMD has performed poorly compared to its volatility risk.

The added value of emerging markets debt segments for a multi-asset portfolio

Multi-asset investors often focus on how new asset classes affect a portfolio that consists of conventional asset classes such as global treasuries, investment grade credits, and developed and emerging equity markets. In the case of emerging markets debt, a comparison with the global corporate high yield bond market may be relevant, as this asset class is also often considered unconventional, i.e. not part of a regular benchmark. The benchmark portfolio has a 50% weight to global bond markets and a 50% weight to global equity markets.5 As emerging debt markets tend to be riskier, we decided to finance the 20% allocation by selling 12% from the global bond and 8% from the global equity portfolios aiming to maintain a similar overall portfolio risk. We do this for each of the three emerging debt segments separately, as well as an equal-weighted combination of 5% in the three emerging debt segments and 5% in corporate high yield.

Figure 3 shows the rolling three-year excess returns of the portfolios containing the three EMD segments and corporate high yield. Excess returns were positive in the first part of the sample, especially for the local-currency segment. A large part of the excess return can be explained by the weakening of the US dollar against emerging markets currencies. However, the tides turned after the ‘taper tantrum’ by Federal Reserve president Ben Bernanke in 2013. After that, the EMD segments only occasionally showed (small) outperformances on a three-year horizon with the hard-currency segment outperforming around 2016-2017. Given the differences in performance over time between local- and hard-currency debt, the equal-weighted basket shows that a combination of the segments leads to more stable excess returns. However, based on past 10-year performance, emerging markets debt detracted value from a multi-asset portfolio.

Figure 3 – Rolling three-year excess performance from adding alternative fixed income segments

Figure  3 – Rolling three-year excess performance from adding alternative fixed income segments

Source: Robeco, JP Morgan, Bloomberg, MSCI. Returns and volatility annualized from monthly data. Returns in US dollars. This analysis is based on historical research and does not reflect actual performance of any investment product or strategy. It is intended for illustrative purposes only.

Stay informed on Credit investing

Stay ahead with our newsletter on the latest in credit investing.

Discover credits

Expected returns on emerging markets currencies essential

Currency returns are the most important driver of the local-currency EMD segment, showing a 0.95 correlation with total returns. A possible indicator of long-term expected currency returns is their valuation and a common valuation metric is the real exchange rate, which is derived from purchasing power parity. Emerging currencies were relatively cheap in 2003 and as a group strengthened versus the US dollar by 35% in the decade afterwards. However, most of this was lost over the past decade, and we are currently close to 2003 levels of currency valuation. Although there are many factors that can affect relative currency strength, an attractive starting valuation tends to predict higher future returns. Thus, for the local-currency EMD segment, investors need to form a view on the expected currency returns compared to the yield pickup, as the currency volatility may reduce the portfolio’s Sharpe ratio.

Diversification of default risk drivers

Given the absence of direct currency risk in the hard-currency EMD segment, we find its total returns are highly correlated with other ‘US risk-free yield plus default spread’ segments, such as corporate investment grade and high yield bonds. The risk-free yield component is shared by these segments, and therefore movements in the US Treasury curve affect each segment similarly. Over the past two decades, the credit spreads of the hard-currency EMD segment have also moved in line with that of corporate bonds in developed markets, suggesting that these credit markets are largely integrated. Even though past correlation has been high, it is important to realize that the fundamental drivers of credit risk are very different. The default probability of a globally diversified group of more than 70 issuing emerging governments is not directly linked to that of corporates in developed countries, although global business cycle risk may affect both at the same time. The credit rating distribution shows that this asset class is more comparable to corporate investment grade, whereas the spread levels and thus overall return indicate that it acts more like high yield bonds. This characteristic warrants the consideration of this asset class in a portfolio context from a risk-return perspective.

Country selection within emerging markets debt

So far, we have considered only the entire local- and hard-currency emerging debt segments. There are considerable differences in yield, maturity, and macroeconomic exposures within these segments that skilled investors can exploit by investing only in a subset of bonds from countries with a better reward for the risk. In that selection process the sustainability profile of the issuers can also be considered, such that the emerging markets debt portfolio matches the investor’s investment philosophy and adds value to their portfolio. 6

For a more detailed analysis on each of the emerging markets debt segments, see Giesta de Mello Fernandes and Swinkels (2025), Exploring emerging markets debt: Bond voyage?

Footnotes

1 This value is derived from adding the market value of the broadest EM debt indices provided by JP Morgan per segment: JP Morgan EMBI Global, JP Morgan GBI-EM Broad, and JP Morgan CEMBI Broad. The exception is the inflation-linked segment where the index is provided by Bloomberg: the Bloomberg EM Govt IL All Mats.
2 We assume the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index to be the proxy for the overall global bond market.
3 These indices are the JP Morgan GBI-EM Global Diversified for local-currency sovereigns and the JP Morgan EMBI Global Diversified for hard-currency sovereigns.
4 We leave the inflation-linked bond segment out, because it is the smallest and dominated by two issuers: Brazil and Mexico.
5 To be more precise, the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index (hedged to US dollars) and the MSCI All Countries World Index (in US dollars).
6 For more on sustainability, see the publication Sovereign sustainability: The two lenses applied by Robeco

Important information

The contents of this document have not been reviewed by the Securities and Futures Commission ("SFC") in Hong Kong. If you are in any doubt about any of the contents of this document, you should obtain independent professional advice. This document has been distributed by Robeco Hong Kong Limited (‘Robeco’). Robeco is regulated by the SFC in Hong Kong. This document has been prepared on a confidential basis solely for the recipient and is for information purposes only. Any reproduction or distribution of this documentation, in whole or in part, or the disclosure of its contents, without the prior written consent of Robeco, is prohibited. By accepting this documentation, the recipient agrees to the foregoing This document is intended to provide the reader with information on Robeco’s specific capabilities, but does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell certain securities or investment products. Investment decisions should only be based on the relevant prospectus and on thorough financial, fiscal and legal advice. Please refer to the relevant offering documents for details including the risk factors before making any investment decisions. The contents of this document are based upon sources of information believed to be reliable. This document is not intended for distribution to or use by any person or entity in any jurisdiction or country where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation. Investment Involves risks. Historical returns are provided for illustrative purposes only and do not necessarily reflect Robeco’s expectations for the future. The value of your investments may fluctuate. Past performance is no indication of current or future performance.