Commodities rout will fuel EM concerns and volatility

Significance This drop has taken oil into its second bear market in the space of just over a year amid a broader rout in the prices of commodities, notably copper and gold. The commodity sell-off is fuelled by mounting concerns over the economy and financial markets of China, the world's top crude importer and its largest energy user. The sell-off is exacerbated by fears over the fallout from a US interest rates rise, which could come as early as September. Country-specific risks are weighing on emerging market (EM) assets, notably the currencies of large commodity exporters such as Brazil and Russia. Impacts The sharp fall in commodity prices will exert further downward pressure on inflation in both emerging and advanced economies. Re-emerging disinflationary trends will bode ill for the ECB efforts to boost inflation in the euro-area. The commodity sell-off will exacerbate economic and political crises in Brazil and Russia. The EM currencies fall is forcing many central banks to signal an end to monetary easing or to tighten policy.

Subject Monetary divergence Significance After reaching multi-year highs in the second half of 2017, euro-area manufacturing and services surveys are now signposting slower growth. Meanwhile, euro strength is dampening inflation pressures. Thus the ECB will be cautious in its plans to ‘normalise’ its ultra-loose monetary policy. Impacts The euro has gained 15% against the dollar over the past twelve months; growing divergence with US policy will fuel further strength. Further euro strength is likely to put more downward pressure on euro-area core inflation and could damage export competitiveness. Markets are likely to remain volatile; the S&P 500 equity index is experiencing its second-most volatile year outside a bear market. Investors’ appetite for ‘risk assets’ will remain strong; 65 billion dollars has gone into emerging market bond and equity funds in 2018.


Significance Inflation rates are rising sharply across Central-Eastern Europe (CEE), mainly thanks to a recovery in commodity prices. A flurry of stronger-than-expected economic data is fuelling speculation in financial markets about the timing of increases in interest rates across the CEE region. Forward markets are already pricing in rate hikes in Romania and Poland within the next twelve months. Impacts Traders are now expecting the US Federal Reserve to achieve its goal of hiking interest rates three times this year. Emerging-market bond and equity funds are enjoying a surge in inflows, market sentiment having improved sharply after the US election. Mounting uncertainty regarding France’s presidential election next month is having a negligible impact on euro-area government bond markets.


Subject The prospects for Emerging Europe assets. Significance Despite record levels of outflows from emerging market (EM) bond and equity funds in 2015, the financial markets of Central-Eastern Europe (CEE) have remained remarkably resilient. They are likely to continue to outperform those of Latin America and Emerging Asia next year, because of a combination of relatively strong fundamentals and liquidity support from the ECB. Impacts Investor sentiment towards developing economies is now shaped almost entirely by dramatic declines in commodity prices. US monetary policy will now prove secondary to the plunge in oil prices. Growth in the CEE region picked up significantly this year and is still expected to remain relatively robust in 2016.


Significance Despite PiS's costly spending pledges, its nationalist and populist views and its strong support for a controversial, Hungarian-style debt-relief scheme for holders of foreign currency-denominated mortgages, the prospect is causing little anxiety in financial markets. Investors are taking the view that PiS, which is leading the ruling Civic Platform (PO) party by a wide margin in opinion polls, will be forced to renege on many of its campaign promises. Impacts Poland is less vulnerable to the VW scandal, auto manufacture accounting for a much larger share of Czech and Hungarian jobs and GDP. A hard landing for China's economy is now seen as the largest threat to financial markets, as opposed to a rise in US interest rates. Central Europe's economies are better placed to cope with deteriorating sentiment towards EMs. Downside risks to inflation from falling commodity prices and slower EM growth put the NBP under pressure to loosen monetary policy further.


Significance The currency and debt markets of Central-Eastern Europe (CEE) are proving resilient to fallout from the turmoil in China's financial markets, now the primary determinant of investor sentiment towards developing economies. Negligible trade linkages with China and liquidity support from the ECB are helping underpin favourable sentiment towards the region. Impacts EM equity and bond funds will continue to suffer outflows, following record bond redemptions in 2015, which continued into early January. The dramatic slide in oil prices is putting further downward pressure on CE inflation rates; there is outright deflation in Poland. Hungary is mulling further cuts in interest rates. Despite Turkey's favourable status as a major oil importer, its currency has plunged by 31% against the dollar over the past year. For CE, the lower the oil price, the greater the likelihood of further ECB stimulus, buoying local bonds and currencies further.


2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 622-640 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Landgraf ◽  
Abdur Chowdhury

Purpose – What caused the mid-2000s world commodity price “bubble” and the recent commodity price growth? Some have suggested that rapid global industrial growth over the past decade is the key driver of price growth. Others have argued that high commodity prices are a result of excessively loose monetary policy. The purpose of this paper is to extend the current research in this area by incorporating emerging economies, the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) nations specifically, into global measures. Design/methodology/approach – The paper uses a vector error correction (VEC) model and computes variance decomposition and impulse response functions (IRFs). Findings – The empirical analysis suggest that the “demand channel” plays a large part in explaining commodity price growth whether BRIC countries are included or excluded from the analysis. However, excess liquidity may also play a part in explaining price growth. In addition, factoring in BRIC country data leads to the conclusion that unexpected movements in liquidity eventually explain more of the variation in commodity prices than unexpected demand shocks. This specific result is not caught in the sample that only incorporates advanced economies. Research limitations/implications – Despite the theory of Frankel (1986) and the findings of previous global vector autoregression (VAR)/VEC analyses, interest rates, especially shocks, have a minimal impact on consumer and commodity prices. Perhaps future studies should include an interest rate in their analysis that more closely reflects interest rates associated with information used by commodity consumers, producers, and investors. Some analyses such as Hua (1998) use the LIBOR rate, which is highly associated with developed financial markets in the advanced economies. Data quality and availability in the BRIC countries severely limited the length of the time period analyzed and the frequency of the data. Finding longer sample periods or higher frequency data can help to minimize bias in future research. In this paper, monetary aggregates and short-term interest rates were loosely connected to monetary policy. It would also be interesting to directly examine how special programs like quantitative easing influenced global liquidity. Practical implications – The results of the IRFs and variance decompositions confirm some of the previous findings reported in Belke et al. (2010), Hua (1998), and Swaray (2008) that suggest that positive shocks to liquidity positively impact commodity prices. In particular, both samples suggest that this is a short-run impact that occurs after two quarters. However, in the sample that includes information about liquidity from BRIC countries, excess liquidity positively affects commodity prices after six and seven quarters as well. The insignificant results of Granger causality tests of the effect of monetary variables on commodity prices suggests that this relationship is limited to movements in liquidity that is unexpected by agents in the system. These “shocks” could be attributed to a number of factors including exogenous monetary policy changes such as the unprecedented responses by the Federal Reserve during and after the 2008 global financial crisis. Social implications – First, empirical research that claims to analyze relationships at a “global” level needs to account for the growing influence of emerging economies and not simply the advanced economies. Otherwise, results may be biased as they were when too much of the forecast error variance in commodity prices was attributed to shocks to output when it should have been attributed to shocks to excess liquidity. Second, those who criticize expansionary monetary policy in the advanced countries, especially by the Federal Reserve, for pushing up commodity prices should also direct their attention toward monetary authorities elsewhere, especially the BRIC countries, since information on excess liquidity from these countries adds to the influence that global excess liquidity has on commodity prices. Third, monetary policymakers in the advanced countries need to closely monitor liquidity in the BRIC countries, since the discrepancies between the ALL and ADV samples suggests that BRIC excess liquidity affects commodity prices in a way that cannot be captured by examining advanced country data alone. Originality/value – No other paper in this area looked at the BRIC countries.


Subject Outlook for US financial markets. Significance Since October, the benchmark S&P 500 index has fallen by more than 5% as part of a broad-based sell-off of financial assets. Indications that the ‘America First’ inspired trade agenda is unravelling include concerns that rising US interest rates will dampen economic growth and corporate earnings, and a rout in technology stocks, the high-flying sector that powered the US equity rally from mid-May to late-September when US stocks significantly outperformed their European, Japanese and Emerging Market (EM) peers. Impacts Lower oil prices will extert downward pressure on inflation. Efforts by China and the United States to wean themselves off mutual dependence in tech could escalate, curbing the US tech stocks bull run. The first inversion of the bond yield curve since 2007, will fuel speculation that the Fed will slow monetary tightening. EM equities will remain volatile, despite have risen by nearly 9% since October 29, partly reversing their 2018 sell-off.


Subject The impact of the European Commission decision to escalate the ‘rule of law’ procedure against Poland to its third and final stage. Significance The escalation in tensions between Warsaw and Brussels over reforms that threaten the independence of Poland’s judiciary is having a muted impact on sentiment in financial markets. More important are investors’ bullish stance on emerging markets (EM), and expectations that the ECB is in no rush to withdraw monetary stimulus. Impacts The dollar index against other currencies has fallen to its lowest level since May 2016, providing a major fillip to emerging market assets. Sentiment towards developing economies is buoyed by the prospect of persistently low interest rates. The severe escalation in US-North Korean tensions is having only a muted impact on financial markets, judging by the Vix Index ‘fear gauge’.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Szymon Stereńczak

Purpose This paper aims to empirically indicate the factors influencing stock liquidity premium (i.e. the relationship between liquidity and stock returns) in one of the leading European emerging markets, namely, the Polish one. Design/methodology/approach Various firms’ characteristics and market states are analysed as potentially affecting liquidity premiums in the Polish stock market. Stock returns are regressed on liquidity measures and panel models are used. Liquidity premium has been estimated in various subsamples. Findings The findings vividly contradict the common sense that liquidity premium raises during the periods of stress. Liquidity premium does not increase during bear markets, as investors lengthen the investment horizon when market liquidity decreases. Liquidity premium varies with the firm’s size, book-to-market value and stock risk, but these patterns seem to vanish during a bear market. Originality/value This is one of the first empirical papers considering conditional stock liquidity premium in an emerging market. Using a unique methodological design it is presented that liquidity premium in emerging markets behaves differently than in developed markets.


Author(s):  
Mitsuhiro Furusawa

The chapter highlights the state of monetary policy in Africa and explores the challenges that central banks face as they address the increasingly complex forces at work in the global economy. It sequences the evolution of monetary policy from the time of World War II under the Bretton Woods system to the more recent forward-looking monetary policy in advanced economies and relates it to influencing the evolution of monetary policy frameworks in Africa. Some challenges affecting African countries are identified, including the collapse of commodity prices, persistent high interest rates spreads, and limitations of high frequency data that constrain monetary authorities’ abilities to take corrective actions in a timely manner. The chapter concludes by providing seven principles towards increasing the effectiveness of monetary policy for countries seeking to move towards forward-looking monetary policy frameworks.


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