A Virtuous Cycle in Local Currency Bond Markets?

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A Virtuous Cycle in Local Currency Bond Markets? John D. Burger The Sellinger School, Loyola College in Maryland Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Francis E. Warnock Darden Business School, NBER, IIIS at Trinity College in Dublin The Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute at the Dallas Fed Veronica Cacdac Warnock The Batten Institute, Darden Business School World Bank Roundtable Conference and Workshop Gemloc Advisory Services: Developing local currency bond markets in emerging economies May 29-30, 2008 1

Overview Recent surge in local bond market development Particularly in Emerging Markets reduced reliance on foreign currency debt. How have cross-border investors responded? Difficult to assess on a global scale limitations of CPIS data, but U.S. participation figures are available. Returns have been very attractive from U.S. investors perspective. U.S. investors have responded with a general portfolio shift away from developed into emerging markets. Cross-border investors attracted to investor-friendly institutions and policies. Virtuous Cycle? 2

The Evolution of Local Currency Bond Market Development as % of GDP as % of total issuance 2001 2006 2001 2006 U.S. 136 161 98 97 Euro Area 99 141 90 91 Japan 108 158 99 99 Emerging Mkts 28 33 75 83 Latin America 18 20 51 67 Asia 37 43 90 92 Europe 20 21 64 72 Source: Data underlying BIS Tables 14B (domestic bonds) and 16A (international bonds). 2001 data was previously published in Burger and Warnock (2006). 3

Determinants of Local Currency Bond Market Development Burger and Warnock 2006; Claessens, Klingebiel, and Schmukler 2007; BIS 2007; among others. It s not original, just sin Emerging markets are NOT predestined to rely on foreign currency debt. Creditor-friendly policies e.g. low and stable inflation is associated with local currency development. Importance of Institutional factors rule of law, creditor rights, etc. 4

How have global investors reacted to developments in local currency bond markets? How will global investors react to future events? Data constraints limit our ability to answer these questions. Broadest survey of cross-border investment (CPIS) is particularly ill-suited to analyze participation in local currency markets.

Problem #1:Data quality is questionable. Very few countries follow the best practices that are necessary to properly identify important characteristics of cross-border holdings. Problem #2: CPIS data provide no information on currency denomination, which is vital for bonds. Are cross-border bond investors truly holding local currency bonds, or do they seek foreign bonds issued in their home currency? 6

A Glimpse at CPIS Problem #1 A Glimpse at CPIS Problem #1: 2006 CPIS-Reported Euro Area Equity Holdings in Luxembourg % Foreign Portfolio % Lux Market Austria 22 24 Belgium 41 138 Finland 14 17 France 14 122 Germany 43 329 Greece 30 5 Ireland 5 35 Italy 57 381 Netherlands 9 66 Portugal 23 8 Spain 33 74 sum 1201 memo: US 0 20 7

X prefers Y s local currency bonds Y tends to issue bonds denominated in currency X Cannot differentiate between these two statements using CPIS data. Until countries begin reporting the currency composition of bond holdings, CPIS data on cross-border investment in bonds will be unable to distinguish between these statements. 8

US Holdings 0.05.1.15.2 SWE ISR NZL ISL IRL CAN EGY MEX GBR NOR IDN POL NLD MYS DNK FRA ZAF HRV FIN SVK DEU TUR BEL ESP THA JPN HUNAUT PAK KOR MAR PRT GRC CHN CHE CZE ITAIND TWN AUS CHL SGP BRA ARG PER HKG 0.2.4.6.8 Issuance in Dollars PHL RUS VEN R 2 = 0.5

Dependent Variable: Portion of country i s foreign bond portfolio invested in country j s bonds (CPIS data) Issuance Portion of country j s bonds denominated in currency i 0.057 (0.010) Imports Portion of country i s imports that originate from country j 0.672 (0.000) Exchange Rate Volatility Nominal volatility between the currencies i and j -15.5 (0.575) N =1271 Adjusted R 2 = 0.725 Double fixed effects with full sets of source and destination dummies. p-values in parentheses. 10

CPIS data are not equipped to investigate holdings in local currency bond markets. A few countries do collect security-level information (including currency denomination) on cross-border holdings. Example: U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve benchmark surveys conducted end-2001 and end-2006. Before analyzing 2006 survey we review returns data from perspective of US investor.

Recent period exhibits attractive returns for U.S. based investors especially in emerging markets. Jan 98 Dec 01 Mean (%) Variance Skewness Correlation with US US 0.52 1.89-0.21 GBI (ex-us) 0.11 6.10 0.08 0.49 EMEs -0.03 58.7-0.94 0.12 Jan 02 Nov 06 US 0.43 2.26-0.59 GBI (ex-us) 0.81 6.97 0.15 0.56 EMEs 1.17 3.96-0.25 0.27 Monthly USD returns. Source: JP Morgan GBI Indexes. For EMEs, latter period uses GBI-EM but for earlier period no local currency index existed. Authors calculated returns based on EMBI/JACI plus currency returns and averaged across 20 EMEs. 12

Return-Risk Tradeoffs for US investors, 2002-2006: Free lunch for hedged returns, unhedged high risk high reward Figure 2: US - ROW Bond Portfolios 2002-2006 1.000 0.900 100% ROW (unhedged) 0.800 0.700 100% ROW (half-hedged) (currency) Monthly Return % 0.600 0.500 0.400 0.300 100% ROW (fully hedged) (free lunch) 100% US Bonds 0.200 0.100 0.000 0.000 0.500 1.000 1.500 2.000 2.500 Standard Deviation

U.S. investors have increased portfolio weights on local currency bonds in emerging markets. Holdings as Percentage of Local Currency Issuance Dec. 2001 Dec. 2006 Developed Markets 1.20 0.94 Euro Area 1.35 0.71 Japan 0.48 0.57 Emerging Markets 0.14 0.69 Latin America 0.15 2.03 Emerging Asia 0.04 0.21 14

Determinants of Cross-Border Investment Is the portfolio shift toward emerging markets a temporary or permanent phenomenon? What attracts/deters cross-border investors? Crisil 2008 Investability Indicators allow analysis of institutional factors and policies Returns-chasing behavior by international investors?

Capital Controls Liquidity and efficiency Regulatory Quality and Creditor Rights Market Infrastructure Taxation Domestic Investor Base Crisil 2008 provides for 20 Gemloc countries. We supplement for industrial countries.

RHS Variable Coef. (t-stat) Composite Investability 0.196*** (2.28) Capital Controls 0.109* (1.86) Liquidity and efficiency 0.115* (1.93) Regulatory / Creditor Rights 0.282*** (2.83) Market Infrastructure 0.150* (1.85) Taxation 0.22 (1.33) Domestic Investor Base 0.215* (1.80) ***significant at 1% level * significant at 10% level

US Holdings 0.01.02.03.04 EGY PHL MARNGA CHN US Investment and Investability IND RUS PER BRA IDN TUR SVK THA MEX CHL POL HUN.5.6.7.8.9 Investability ZAF MYS R 2 = 0.24

We find no evidence that U.S. investors discriminated based on past returns. US Investment and Mean Returns US Holdings 0.02.04.06.08.1 JPN SGP ISR MYS MEX HKG THA CHN IND CAN NZL POL BRA SWE GBR AUS IDN DNK SVK DEU FRAIRL HUN NLD ZAF FIN BEL KOR PRT AUT ESP GRC RUS ITA TUR PHL CHL CZE 0.1.2.3 Mean Returns PER R 2 = 0.02

2001-2006 saw substantial development of local bond markets and reduced reliance on foreign currency issuance especially in emerging markets. From U.S. investor perspective, cross-border local currency bonds offered attractive returns. U.S. investors responded by increasing holdings of local currency bonds in emerging markets. U.S. investors favored countries where investorfriendly institutions and polices have been established.

Development of local markets and increased foreign participation should be mutually reinforcing. Factors that attract foreign investors are also critical for local market development. Countries that can attract foreign investors into local bond markets can borrow without relying on foreign-currency-denominated debt and are therefore less susceptible to currency mismatches. Foreign investors could broaden the investor base and add liquidity to secondary markets.

Dev Ctys: Consumer Prices % change over previous year, NSA 14 14 12 12 10 10 8 8 6 6 4 4 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 Source: International Monetary Fund /Haver Analytics

Thank You. John D. Burger Francis E. Warnock Veronica Cacdac Warnock World Bank Roundtable Conference and Workshop Gemloc Advisory Services: Developing local currency bond markets in emerging economies May 29-30, 2008 23