Forty of the more than 3,000 emerging market bonds covered by
UBS's wealth management arm have now zero or negative yields,
said Jerome Audran, emerging markets analyst at UBS Global
Wealth Management. The negative yielding bonds are denominated
in euros and Swiss francs.
"The outstanding amount of negative yielding bonds is increasing
due to the dovish shift in global central banks' monetary
policies," he said in emailed comments to Reuters.
"We rate many of them as expensive, as we expect them to post
very low to negative returns over the short-to-medium term and
underperform similarly-rated EM [emerging market] peers."
After the recent dive in the euro zone's 10-year benchmark
German government bond yield, other euro government and
corporate debt have been dragged into negative territory,
including some emerging market bonds.
UBS Global Wealth Management maintained its moderate overweight
on high-yield credit in its emerging markets portfolio, said
Audran, adding those bonds were expected to outperform
investment grade peers in the near term.
"While the global fixed income market is artificially boosted by
very accommodative global liquidity conditions we think this
should remain a positive credit catalyst for EM USD [U.S.
dollar] bonds in the near term," he added.
(Reporting by Tom Arnold, editing by Louise Heavens)
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