Mexico saw its currency slide and bond yields surge as President Donald Trump was elected in November after lambasting the country for stealing US jobs. Even after an initial sell-off subsided, 10-year bond yield is still more than a percentage point above where it was before the election. The peso's real-effective exchange rate is close to a 21-year low, boosting the earnings outlook for exporters.
“Both Mexico’s currency and bonds have been sold too much,” said Akira Takei, who helps oversee the equivalent of $440 billion as a fund manager at Asset Management One Co in Tokyo. He said expectations the dollar will weaken have convinced him to hold a higher proportion of pesos and Mexican government bonds in his portfolio than recommended by the benchmarks he follows.
Analysts have raised the fourth-quarter peso forecast by almost 5 per cent to 20.50 per dollar since February as Mexico's currency retraced some of the declines that started in November.
The new tax "is a great thing in the medium term, but there will be some disruption to consumption in the months following its introduction," said Vaninder Singh, an economist at NatWest Markets in Singapore.
Singh agrees India appears unattractive for investors at the moment. “You will have to see a correction in the equity markets and as a consequences the Indian rupee as well.”
Metrics
Bloomberg's analysis covers nine of the 10 countries making up JPMorgan Chase & Co's Emerging Market Currency Index. Singapore is excluded as it is considered to be a developed nation.
The attractiveness of each country is computed for the following criteria, with forecasts compiled from Bloomberg surveys of analysts and economists:
- Forecast growth in gross domestic product for 2017
- Forecast current-account balance for 2017 relative to GDP
- Price-earnings ratio for the key stock index
- Ten-year bond yield
- Real-effective exchange rate based on data from Bank for International Settlements
- Implied foreign-exchange volatility
- Sovereign credit rating
The results for stock price-earnings ratios, real effective exchange rate and foreign-exchange volatility are reversed as higher figures mean they are less attractive for investors.
GDP growth measures the potential for asset returns, while the current-account balance indicates the risk of a currency crisis. Equities, government bonds and currencies represent major investment classes. Implied volatility gauges risks to carry trade. The credit rating is a proxy of the riskiness of government bonds and currencies. Ratings are based on Moody's Investors Service, and the alphabetical symbols are converted into numbers, with Aaa given a value of 20 and C representing zero.
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