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Matthew Ryan
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How have emerging market currencies reacted to the COVID-19 pandemic?

The COVID-19 pandemic has created a very volatile environment in the foreign exchange market especially for currencies perceived as higher risk. Here Ebury takes a look at which emerging market currencies have been affected, to what extent as well as laying out some expectations for the future.
FX Market Updates
The COVID-19 pandemic has created a very volatile and unpredictable environment in the foreign exchange market so far in 2020, particularly among emerging markets.

The emergence of the virus, and its aggressive spread around the world, has forced authorities to put in place strict and unprecedented containment measures designed to limit the loss of life. These containment measures, combined with the unveiling of major monetary and fiscal stimulus from central banks and governments, have made accurately forecasting moves in financial markets increasingly challenging.

Risk assets rebound following dramatic sell-off

As is customary during times of intense financial market stress and uncertainty, investors flocked to those assets deemed as lower risk during the height of the panic in March, while selling those perceived as high risk. Emerging market currencies, perceived as higher risk, bore the brunt of the sell-off. Many of these EM currencies sank to multi-year or, in some cases, all-time lows versus the safe-haven US dollar. Barring only a few exceptions, the dollar is currently still trading higher year-to-date against almost every other currency, although the majority have bounced back from their lows. At the time of writing, the dollar is trading approximately 4% higher versus the weighted basket of currencies that comprise MSCI’s emerging market currency index (Figure 1).

Figure 1: MSCI Emerging Market Currency Index (June ‘19 - June ‘20)

MSCI Emerging Market Currency Index (June ‘19 - June ‘20)

Source: Refinitiv Datastream Date: 22/06/2020

Those that experienced the most violent sell-off were generally from countries that are either heavily dependent on the production of commodities, highly reliant on external demand, or have particularly fragile macroeconomic fundamentals. Among the worst performers were the Brazilian real (BRL), South African rand (ZAR), and Mexican peso (MXN), all down in excess of 20% year-to-date at one stage. The best performers tended to be those with either the most solid fundamentals or those that are closely controlled by their respective central banks. The Singapore dollar (SGD) and Israeli new shekel (ILS) are two examples of the latter.

As mentioned we have, however, seen most of these currencies initiate rebounds from their lows. This, we believe, has been a consequence of the falling new cases of the virus in key economic areas, the injection of vast sums of stimulus into markets from major central banks, and investor optimism surrounding a faster-than-expected recovery in the global economy.

Figure 2: FX Performance Tracker [select EM currencies vs. USD] (YTD)

FX Performance Tracker [select EM currencies vs. USD] (YTD)

Source: Refinitiv Datastream Date: 22/06/2020

What’s next for emerging market currencies?

While we think their performance will remain idiosyncratic, we remain optimistic that most emerging market currencies will bounce back in the long-term once the worst of the economic impact is over and the global economy returns to at least some sense of normalcy. The sell-offs induced by the virus were, in our view, driven in large part by an aversion to risk that the pending sharp contraction in global growth has induced. We think that this has left many of them at undervalued levels that are unjustified and not a true reflection of fair value. The recent rebound in EM currencies vindicates this view.

In the short- to medium-term, however, we believe that those emerging markets that are either unable to contain the spread of the virus and/or have the most fragile fundamentals will see their currencies more acutely exposed to additional sell-offs induced by the pandemic. Regarding the former, it is still too early to ascertain the true successfulness of the respective containment measures. The varying degrees of thoroughness and different methodologies used in testing also make cross-border comparison challenging, at best.

Figure 3: Reported COVID-19 Cases (per 1M people) [select EM countries]