Summary:
The Philippine government ordered the suspension of three quarters of the nation’s mines.
Czech central bank sounds more confident of the cap exit.
Poland’s Finance Minister Szalamacha was sacked.
Moody’s downgraded Turkey one notch to Ba1 with a stable outlook.
The Brazilian central bank’s quarterly inflation report set the table for the easing cycle to start.
Stock Markets
In the EM equity space as measured by MSCI, Colombia (+2.1%), Mexico (+1.0%), and Singapore (+0.5%) have outperformed this week, while Turkey (-4.2%), China (-2.5%), and Poland (-2.2%) have underperformed. To put this in better context, MSCI EM fell -1.5% this week while MSCI DM fell -0.6%.
In the EM local currency bond space, Brazil (10-year yield -12 bp), Mexico (-12 bp), and Russia (-9 bp) have outperformed this week, while Turkey (10-year yield +20 bp), Indonesia (+19 bp), and Ukraine (+19 bp) have underperformed. To put this in better context, the 10-year UST yield fell 6 bp this week to 1.56%.
India and Pakistan
Philippines
The Philippine government ordered the suspension of three quarters of the nation’s mines due to environmental violations. The nation is the largest producer of nickel, accounting for around 25% of global output. Environmental Secretary Lopez suspended operations at 30 mines that mainly produce nickel, which together account for over half of the nation’s nickel output. Only 11 mines passed. Coming on top of incendiary comments by President Duterte, foreign investors are likely to remain nervous.
Czech Republic
Poland
Turkey
Moody’s downgraded Turkey one notch to Ba1 with a stable outlook. We agree with the move to sub-investment grade, but disagree with the stable outlook. S&P cut Turkey to BB this summer. Many investment mandates require at least two investment grade ratings in order to be investable, so Turkey could see some forced selling. Fitch is now the sole agency with an investment grade rating on Turkey, but it too should follow suit and downgrade.
Brazil
Tags: Emerging Markets,win-thin