IMF warns of emerging market firms’ €16 trillion debt

Flood of central bank money may be masking bond market flaw

A financial loans store in downtown Brasilia, Brazil.  The IMF has warned that firms in emerging markets are exposed to currency risk. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino
A financial loans store in downtown Brasilia, Brazil. The IMF has warned that firms in emerging markets are exposed to currency risk. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino

The International Monetary Fund warned on Tuesday that emerging market firms, which together have amassed a record $18 trillion (€16 trillion) of debt, need careful monitoring as the era of record low global interest rates comes to an end.

In its latest Global Financial Stability report, the fund said the biggest rises in ‘leverage’ – the amount of debt relative to a firm’s equity – had come in “vulnerable sectors” like construction, mining and oil and gas, and were increasingly exposed to currency risk.

Regionally, the most striking shifts had been in China and Latin America where overall corporate leverage was now at almost 120 per cent and 110 per cent respectively, and leverage in their construction sectors close to 275 and 200 per cent.

“The upward trend in recent years naturally raises concerns because many emerging market financial crises have been preceded by rapid leverage growth,” the report said.

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The IMF also warned that years of record low rates had meant that despite weaker balance sheets, emerging market firms had been able to issue more bonds, and at better terms.

“If rising leverage and issuance have recently been predominantly influenced by external factors (low global rates), then firms are rendered more vulnerable to a tightening of global financial conditions,” the report added.

“Similarly, a decline in the role of firm- and country-level factors in recent years would be consistent with the view that markets may have been underestimating risks.”

Slumping commodity prices, the threat of rising US interest rates, exacerbated in some cases by ugly national politics, have whipped up a near perfect storm for emerging markets this year.

The IMF called for countries to keep a careful eye on their big firms as the global backdrop begins to change. More data was needed, particularly in areas such as how much debt firms had in currencies other than their own.

Many major emerging market currencies have dropped between 20-40 percent against the dollar over the last year which will make paying back any ‘unhedged’ dollar debt far more expensive.

“As advanced economies normalise monetary policy, emerging markets should prepare for an increase in corporate failures.”

"Monitoring vulnerable and systemically important firms, as well as banks and other sectors closely linked to them, is crucial," the report said.

The IMF also warned that the flood of easy money from the world’s central banks may be masking the risk that bond markets may be starved for liquidity when interest rates increase to normal levels.

Liquidity is tightening as banks become less willing to serve as market-makers amid tougher regulations and efforts by the financial industry to reduce risk, the fund said.

“Structural changes, such as reductions in market-making, appear to have reduced the level and resilience of market liquidity,” although not at an alarming pace, it said.

As evidence of the market’s fragility, the fund pointed to events such as the flash rally in US treasuries in October 2014, when yields on benchmark 10-year bonds plunged before bouncing back on seemingly little market news.

There could be “a sudden deterioration in market liquidity and an increase in liquidity spillovers across asset classes” once central banks start tightening the flow of money, the fund said.

“Market liquidity that is low is also likely to be fragile, but seemingly ample market liquidity can also suddenly drop.”

The IMF also cites the growing fixed-income holdings of mutual funds as a risk to liquidity in its study.

- Reuters