No sign of Brexit hit to emerging market asset flows - IIF
[LONDON] Early signs show that last week's vote by Britain to leave the European Union has had no immediate impact on emerging market asset flows, the Institute of International Finance (IIF) said on Thursday.
The IIF said daily EM portfolio flows data suggested outflows were a fairly minor US$210 million on "Brexit Friday" and had seen some recovery since then.
That relatively modest selling compared with US$2.7 billion on August 24 in 2015 when concerns about China's economy and a devaluation of its currency triggered global financial market jitters.
Additional data for the whole of June showed that foreign investors have pumped a net US$16.7 billion into emerging market assets during the month, a big improvement on a near-zero total in May, although shy of the 2010-2014 average of US$22 billion.
It added the buying was concentrated largely at the start of the month before the June 23 Brexit vote and was quite evenly distributed across equities and debt, with inflows of US$9.3 billion and US$7.4 billion respectively.
There was also near-record emerging market debt issuance in June.
Regionally, EM Asia saw inflows of US$13.7 billion, while Africa and the Middle East had US$3.6 billion as South African equities saw a record amount of buying from foreign investors. "Early indications suggest that the Brexit vote had limited immediate impact on portfolio flows to emerging markets," the IIF said. "This picture is consistent with an overall muted impact on EMs to date, despite the spike in risk aversion, helped in part by anticipation that Fed rate hikes will likely be pushed back further."
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
Putin plans to meet Xi in China days after his new term starts
Biden vetoes bid to repeal US labour board rule on contract, franchise workers
Economic leaders of South Korea, Japan, China say FX volatility is a risk
US automakers win extension on use of Chinese graphite in EV tax credits
US service sector contracts in April; price pressures up
Thaksin’s daughter calls central bank independence an ‘obstacle’