This year will see more emerging market countries raise interest rates than at any point since the pre-financial crisis uplands of 2006, analysts at JP Morgan predict.
A presentation by the US investment bank showed 19 of the 24 emerging economies it follows are likely to lift borrowing rates. Only one country, Malaysia, will keep them on hold, while Nigeria, India, China and Turkey are set to cut their rates.
The list wasn't exhaustive, and didn't include the likes of Argentina, for example, which more than doubled its interest rates to an eyewatering 60 percent last year as its currency collapsed.
JP Morgan's global head of research, Joyce Chang, who made the presentation, said the expected pace of hikes could end up being slower if the US Federal Reserves keeps its own increases to a minimum. However, the trend will still be upwards and shows the turnaround seen in emerging markets over the last 12 months.
Between 2015 and early 2018 developing countries, big and small from Brazil and Russia to Armenia and Zambia slashed interest rates, sending borrowing costs sinking and fund managers' profits soaring.
From February last year, though, the resurgent dollar and higher US borrowing costs hit currencies hard, particularly Argentina and Turkey's, prompting EM central banks to raise rates instead.
The result was that hikes outstripped cuts for eight straight months after April - the longest such run since mid 2011.
Chang's presentation showed that the emerging market average rate will go up to just over 5 percent this year, from around 4.7 percent now.
Still JP Morgan expects local currency emerging market bonds to have a much better year than they did last year despite the moves. It sees the asset class earning investors just over 6 percent, which is virtually what they lost last year.
It also forecast dollar-denominated EM debt will gain 2.2 percent compared to the 4.3 percent that it lost in 2018.
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