Morgan Stanley shifts emerging-market stance to Neutral
from Negative
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[September 24, 2018]
By Karin Strohecker
LONDON (Reuters) - Morgan Stanley said on
Monday it had changed its stance on emerging-market bonds and currencies
to neutral from negative following the recent selloff, although it
warned the backdrop for developing markets remained difficult.
"After a significant sell-off, we close our bearish view on EM and shift
into neutral gear," strategist Jaes Lord said in a note to clients. "We
can see the case for some temporary stability after a six-month bear
market."
Emerging markets had a rough time over the summer after crises in Turkey
and Argentina sparked a wider selloff in assets of developing economies.
Following a six-month bear market, Morgan Stanley predicted some
temporary stability might occur, thanks to depressed valuations,
investors adjusting their positioning and a weaker U.S. dollar.
Some idiosyncratic issues had become less concerning, while policy
response to shore up investor confidence had picked up and a further
escalation of trade looked built in, Morgan Stanley added.
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"However, more material escalatory risks over the medium term mean that
this issue should re-emerge as a strong headwind in time and so we do
not see the case to move bullish."
Across high-yielding currencies, Morgan Stanley said it "liked"
Argentina, Indonesia and Russia and moved to a neutral stance on Brazil.
Across local debt, its analysts took a positive view on Mexico and a
neutral stance on Argentina, Brazil and Russia.
"Overall, we see the case for local markets as stronger than credit,
considering better positioning, valuations that are more consistently
cheap across countries and expected dollar weakness," the bank added.
Across emerging-market hard currency debt, Morgan Stanley expected
spreads to tighten with more debt issue supply possibly coming to market
after a rocky summer, which would keep a lid on a potential rally.
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The corporate logo of financial firm Morgan Stanley is pictured on
the company's world headquarters in New York, U.S. April 17, 2017.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
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Bond sales usually rebound in September after a quiet August, but this year's
currency crises in Turkey and Argentina and worries about rising U.S. sanctions
risk for Russia have kept volumes dramatically lower so far.
Morgan Stanley is not the only major bank to take a more positive view on
emerging markets. Goldman Sachs said investor sentiment for emerging market
assets had been firming.
"Recent price action has likely helped buoy sentiment
for EM assets, but we have noticed a marked change over the past two weeks in
investors’ focus on EM - from downside risks to valuation and ‘opportunities’,"
Goldman analysts Caesar Maasry wrote in a note to clients.
Turkey's interest rate increase in September, softer inflation data from the
U.S. and valuations have rekindled "tepid optimism", he said.
"We still prefer equity as the best-positioned asset class for a ‘bounce-back’
and find Brazil, Chile, Peru, Korea, and China offer a good combination of
dislocation and supportive
macro growth dynamics," Maasry added.
MSCI's emerging market equity benchmark <.MSCIEF> has fallen nearly 10 percent
since the start of the year.
(Reporting by Karin Strohecker; editing by Sujata Rao, Larry King)
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