13:00 CET
Emerging Market Debt: Selectively adding risk
By Richard Briggs (Portfolio Manager) and Meena Santosh (Client Portfolio Manager)
The sharp rise in oil prices following the escalation of conflict in the Middle East has continued to weigh on EM local markets, though FX markets have been more resilient than in prior periods of volatility. The International Energy Agency’s release of roughly 400 million barrels from strategic reserves helped ease some of the immediate pressure, but energy prices remain elevated. Higher energy costs have been particularly challenging for oil-importing countries, triggering an initial sell-off in EM local debt, although roughly half of that move has since reversed as markets stabilized.
The most affected regions have been energy-importing economies, particularly in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). For these countries, the greater challenge is gas rather than oil, as it is significantly harder to substitute if the shock persists. Gas is harder to substitute, and supply constraints – especially around Qatari LNG deliveries – mean Asia could face shortages if the Strait remains effectively blocked, and CEE by extension via a search for spot gas exports. Latin America appears somewhat more insulated given the region’s stronger energy balances. Looking ahead, we are closely monitoring the sharp decline in shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and the broader inflationary risks associated with sustained higher oil prices.
From a portfolio perspective, we initially moved long USD as the conflict escalated and global risk aversion increased. As conditions began to stabilize, we reversed that positioning and selectively added risk, buying into some of the hardest-hit markets. We have since returned to a long exposure to Egypt local debt after a sharp sell-off in spot FX, though in smaller size. We also added Turkish rates, where heightened volatility has created more attractive entry points. We have begun to add back to CEE rates too where the sell-off has been severe.
In FX, we remain constructive on EM currencies, focusing on higher-beta names and commodity exporters. While these currencies sold off during the initial shock, they should remain relatively resilient given their status as net energy exporters – similar to the pattern observed during the 2022 gas crisis. By contrast, we remain cautious on Asian FX, particularly the Korean won (KRW) and Thai baht (THB), given their sensitivity to global growth and exposure to higher gas prices. Overall, our tactical and selective positioning has supported portfolio resilience through the volatility.
Within hard currency, we reduced our defensive exposure to the Middle East by closing our Saudi Arabia (KSA) five-year protection, which had been in place to hedge against a potential widening in Saudi credit spreads, though we remain underweight the region. As the conflict escalated and oil prices surged, the hedge performed well, allowing us to take profit and scale back the position. Later, as a more coordinated global policy response emerged – including strategic oil releases and early signs of diplomatic de-escalation – we added risk back into the portfolio. Key hard-currency exposures currently include Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, Egypt, Ghana, Mexico (Pemex), and Romania. These positions are supported by favorable commodity dynamics in Latin America and selective fundamental resilience across several markets.




























































