Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fed rate rises slow emerging markets

- RICH MILLER

The Federal Reserve is finally succeeding in tightening financial conditions, more than two years after it began raising interest rates. The only trouble is that the economic impact is being felt more abroad than in the U.S.

Rising Treasury bond yields and a resurgent U.S. currency have shaken emerging markets as investors have reassessed the creditwort­hiness of nations that loaded up on dollardeno­minated debt. The U.S. economy, in contrast, looks set to power ahead, with economists forecastin­g average annual growth of around 3 percent in the final three quarters of this year, helped by a big dollop of fiscal stimulus.

“It’s a bit like that old saying: The U.S. sneezes and the rest of the world catches a cold,” said Ethan Harris, head of global economics research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York.

The emerging-market jitters aren’t expected to deter Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and his colleagues from delivering their second interest rate increase of

2018 when they meet on June 12-13. What Fed watchers instead will focus on is how many additional increases beyond that policymake­rs pencil in for the rest of the year — one or two — with JPMorgan Chase & Co. chief U.S. economist Michael Feroli betting it will be the latter.

Investors could get some insight into the central bank’s strategy when vice chairman nominee Richard Clarida testifies to Congress today. Barring any missteps, the Pacific Investment Management Co. adviser is expected to win Senate confirmati­on for the post.

Ever since the Fed began raising rates in December 2015, officials have been anticipati­ng that financial conditions would tighten in response and so aid

their efforts to keep the economy on an even keel. Instead, for much of the period, stock prices rose, credit spreads narrowed and the dollar fell.

It’s only in the last few months that has started to change, as rising inflation and the Fed’s repeated rate increases have begun to curb investors’ risk appetite. Policymake­rs “are getting what they want,” Feroli said. “Some things are starting to move in the direction of regulating the pace of growth.”

The tightening of financial conditions though has triggered turbulence in emerging markets, especially in countries whose homegrown problems left them exposed to sudden shifts in investor sentiment. Argentina is in urgent discussion­s with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund about a credit line to try to stop a rout of its currency while Turkey faces a

crisis of confidence amid conflictin­g signals about its policy intentions.

The investor unease prompted the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance last week to reduce its forecast for capital inflows into emerging markets this year by $43 billion to $1.2 trillion.

“Swings in investor sentiment have become more abrupt and bigger in scale, with uncertaint­y over the trajectory of the U.S. dollar and U.S. rates resulting in mini ‘boom-bust’ cycles for portfolio flows,” the Washington-based institute said in its report.

So far, the fallout hasn’t been nearly as bad as what occurred during the so-called taper tantrum of 2013, when a suggestion by then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke that the central bank might scale back its bond buying triggered a collapse in emerging markets.

Convention­al wisdom used

to be that a strong dollar was good for most other countries because it made their exports more competitiv­e in the world’s largest market. Yet a surge in dollar-denominate­d credit to emerging markets — it grew 10 percent last year to $3.7 trillion according to the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s — means that those borrowers may face financing difficulti­es if the U.S. currency appreciate­s.

“When the dollar strengthen­s, cross-border bank credit goes down,” said Valentina Bruno, an associate professor at American University in Washington, who has researched the topic, including with BIS economists.

A Fed study released last week found that the foreign spillovers from higher U.S. interest rates are large and on average almost as big as the effects on the U.S.

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