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27 August 2013 Enterprising Investor Blog

Turmoil in Emerging Markets: Is It 1997 All Over Again?

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From the moment US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke mentioned the word "taper" in May, markets the world over have begun to embrace a new reality. With expectations that the US Federal Reserve will soon begin to tighten monetary conditions, the Treasury Yield Curve has shifted upward by more than 100 basis points, the US dollar is appreciating after years of decline, and emerging markets — particularly those in Asia — are grappling with renewed volatility. Growth has begun slowing, interest rates have been rising, capital is fleeing, and in countries such as India and Indonesia, currencies are dropping sharply. All of which raises the question: Is a second Asian Contagion, like the one in 1997, in the offing?

History may not repeat itself, but it sure does rhyme. Once again, as in the mid-1990s, easy money has inflated Asian economies, particularly over the past five years. And once again, an imminent shift in US monetary policy is the pin bursting the bubble.

To really understand where emerging markets are today, and what might be in store, it is instructive to look at the root causes of the 1997 Asian financial crisis. The seeds of that crisis were planted in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when many Southeast Asian nations, including Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines, experienced a long period of prosperity dubbed the “Asian Miracle.” Many of these countries achieved sustained, strong growth by employing some variant of the infrastructure growth model, a term used to describe growth fueled by investments in manufacturing, exports, technology, and infrastructure, coupled with abundant cheap labor. This combination enabled Asia's emerging economies to produce goods for export at competitive prices. It was a formula further supported by exchange rates that were fixed to the US dollar, the currency of their largest export market. But the boom was fueled by credit, much of it denominated in US dollars, as foreign capital sought out higher interest rates coupled with limited currency risk. In short, the Asian Tigers had hitched their wagon to the US economy.

Unfortunately, things began to sour in 1995, when the United States adopted the Reverse Plaza Accord, whereby the US Federal Reserve reversed its previous efforts to reduce the value of the US dollar and coordinated monetary policy with Japan and Germany to increase the value of the dollar relative to those countries' currencies. The rising dollar was a pivotal moment for the Asian Contagion: Over the 1995–1997 time frame, the Japanese yen fell approximately 60% against the US dollar, making Japanese exports much cheaper on the international export market — and naturally, much more competitive against exports from Asian Tiger countries that were still pegged to the now rapidly appreciating US dollar. As the dollar appreciated, currency markets smelled a problem and began selling Asian currencies, homing in first on the Thai baht, which authorities were forced to devalue in July 1997. Once Thailand broke its peg, currency traders swooped in on the remaining Asian Tigers, forcing each of them to break their own pegs. Ultimately, the International Monetary Fund was called in to provide financial support and help arrest the capital flight.

Once again, emerging market economies are suffering from capital flight. Yet some things have changed. As a recent article in the Wall Street Journal points out, Asian economies, for the most part, no longer maintain currency pegs to the US dollar; instead, their currencies float freely. In addition, Asian central banks' foreign reserves are substantially larger. Even so, dependence on foreign capital still runs high: In India, where the rupee has dropped 13% in three months to an all-time low against the US dollar, external debt clocks in at more than $400 billion, of which roughly 80% is denominated in foreign currencies. India's current account deficit is equal to about 5% of GDP.

Similarly, the Economist reports that in Indonesia, where the national currency, the rupiah, has hit a four-year low against the US dollar, the current-account balance swung to a deficit of 2.7% of GDP last year — and has since widened to 4.4% of GDP.

For these countries to correct their deficits, their currencies must fall materially. Markets have already responded to the Bernanke taper meme, so even though the choice has been made for them by global investors, they now find themselves stuck between a rock and a hard place: Do nothing and watch their external debt skyrocket if their currencies continue to fall in value — or defend their currencies and keep rates low to spur their economies.

This dilemma points out a key lesson from the 1997 Asian financial crisis that is just as valid today: Government economic policies — whether it is setting non-market interest rates, pegging currencies, or whatever the case may be — inherently force markets to depart from the equilibrium that would be achieved by citizens freely choosing the supply and demand of anything, including currencies and credit. The resulting imbalances ultimately and inherently destabilize markets. The only unknown is where the imbalance will manifest itself. Well, now we know.

What about the free flow of capital? A common and often-repeated explanation for the 1997 crisis is that the Asian Tigers had too strongly embraced free trade and money flows, which led to serious gyrations that destabilized their economies. Nobel Prize–winning Columbia University economist Joseph Stiglitz has famously contended that "too much liberalization" was a root cause of the Asian crisis and had subjected these countries to "the will of speculators." Perhaps, as Stiglitz and others argue, there should be a more measured approach governing capital inflows — a subject that is already receiving renewed focus from scholars and policymakers alike. But to highlight a country's openness to foreign capital as a problem without also highlighting the abrogation of free market interest rates and exchange rates strikes me as shortsighted.

Yet here we are. Unfortunately for emerging markets like India and Indonesia (not to mention Turkey and Brazil), easy money in the developed world has likely created yet another credit-induced bubble that appears ready to pop. Or to switch up analogies: Money is like water. It always flows somewhere, and it's never quite clear exactly where it will go. The resulting, inevitable malinvestment that follows in its wake is revealed only after calamity strikes.


Please note that the content of this site should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute.

43 Comments

J
Jinto (not verified)
28th August 2013 | 4:37am

Good article. So if I put it in Indian perspective (I am from India), India has more to lose from currency depreciation than to gain from it (unlike in the case of Japan).

RR
Ron Rimkus, CFA (not verified)
28th August 2013 | 8:55am

Hi Jinto,

I would encourage you to think about it in terms of trade-offs. If India wants to keep its external debt from becoming a greater problem, it must stabilize the rupee and increase interest rates. However, if it increases interest rates [substantially], it will likely throw the economy into recession. Theoretically, if it lowered rates to stimulate the economy (very unlikely of course), then it would stimulate the economy (through incremental credit creation), but accelerate the outflow of capital (and accelerate inflation). Doing nothing is also a choice because the US is shifting monetary policy in a global monetary system, so doing nothing means India is easing (relative to the US which is - likely - tightening.

A
Abhishek (not verified)
28th August 2013 | 2:03pm

Well Ron, its high time for emerging markets to step up and take concrete decsions, but ideally when currency depreciates, exports could be encouraged and that might make up for the CAD. China, in the past has depreciated its own currency to hike its exports and its has worked you see,

..so doesn't this help...why aren't these situations made such impossible tasks...

AQ
Adnan Qureshi (not verified)
29th August 2013 | 6:17am

Abhishek the problem that India is facing as of now is the implementation of those fiscal and monetary policies on top of that the political instability with the elections coming up have also led the Rupee to depreciate much more further.
The situation that you explained is good but only when the Demand for Indian Exports is high. China on the other hand is like the worlds Industrial Capital so you see where we are lying as of now

SP
Sandeep Purohit (not verified)
28th August 2013 | 8:51pm

Hello Ron,

Thanks again for yet another very knowledgable blog. I agree with you and Indian Rupee breached 68 mark against dollar today. I have two questions-
1. can you elaborate little more when you said " For these countries to correct their deficits, their currencies must fall materially."
2. can you also explain little more the how fed's tapering of monetary policy would impact the emerging market's currency depreciation.

I did not know the earlier currency crisis but now I can understand what happened and why. I would also like to mention some other factors which are prevalent today not sure about of earlier scenario.

Do you feel that inflation is also playing big role now ? After the financial crisis of 2007-08, US has not seen any inflation compare to what Indian economy has been seeing. So its currency should depreciate in same ratio, I would say. Also, some government policies like Indian lower house just passed food security bill and this bill would increase the fiscal deficit by another 0.25% of GDP.

RR
Ron Rimkus, CFA (not verified)
28th August 2013 | 9:49pm

Hi Sandeep,

Under the current global fiat currency regime, currencies should float freely according to supply and demand. Free floating currencies would adjust in value until trade imbalances are minimized thereby preventing significant buildups of deficits or surpluses. Various departures from free markets create imbalances in the economy as the natural supply and demand for goods is altered. Central banks are constantly tinkering with money supply and interest rates (and bank loans through regulatory oversight) to override the natural equilibrium of free markets. In India's case, they are sending more money abroad than they are bringing in (current account deficit). Therefore, pressures have been building to reduce the value of the rupee to correct the imbalance. (A lower rupee will make Indian goods more attractive on the international market and stimulate foreign demand and improve capital flow into India).

The second issue you raise is about the Fed taper. The Fed taper means a tightening of US monetary policy and consequent strengthening of the US dollar. For the past five years it has been extremely easy to borrow cheaply in the US (as well as Japan and Europe) and invest that capital in Emerging Markets and earn a substantial spread. (known as carry trade). The unwinding of Fed policy threatens the carry trade and forces investors to unwind the position. Naturally, they must sell Emerging Market assets (bonds, stocks) and sell the currency, then find a new investment alternatives. Hope this helps!

SP
Sandeep Purohit (not verified)
28th August 2013 | 10:03pm

Thanks so much for your explanation, I really appreciated.

J
Jonathan (not verified)
29th August 2013 | 12:52am

Excellent write up Ron!
What do you think is making the currencies of the emerging markets depreciate is it the ineffective mamagement of the economies or is it due to the Fed tapering?

MA
M Ashok, CFA (not verified)
29th August 2013 | 1:27am

Fair enough to say Nobel winning Joseph Stiglitz was short sighted (in not considering currency peg and other frictions). But other commentators on India currency matters now also seem far more short sighted and are not blameless. In that, comparing India's currency fall with Asian crisis of '97 faced by its counterparts.

Today a country like Thailand has a GDP of $365 Billion with 66 million population. India is nearly 5 times bigger (in output) with GDP of $1.8 Trillion and a population of 1.2 billion. Trade-wise, exports is still a small component of the economy. We are still, for practical purposes, a closed economy. Our currency regime is still controlled, though commentators fashionably call we (India) are almost fully convertible.

On an average India saves about 30% of its income. That's roughly internal savings of over $400-$500 billion every year!. If you see the Foreign Inst. Flows into the country since '91 (as per SEBI- the capital market regulator) the net inflow till date, that is about two decades, is only $140 bn. The problem with India's savings is that they are not fully channelized into financial assets, rather it goes into gold and real estate assets. Leaving household holding of equity and marketable instruments very low. Roughly 8% of India's saving goes into financial assets. As a result, foreign money holds significant stake in India's equity markets and even small shifts in this flow cause wide gyrations in equity prices.

Sure our currency depreciation was waiting to happen because our inflation differential with DM got wider and our growth differential got narrower. Happy to see currency depreciate rather than being pegged like other countries. This depreciation is a natural cure to avoid a disaster. The adjustment required, is happening and will be done.

Other than that, India and its govt knows what it takes to put it back on the growth path. We all know what those issues are. (environmental clearances, fuel price adjustment....). I mean we not walking in the dark.

Therefore comparing India with much, much, much smaller counterparts which are single industry driven, homogeneous economy, homogeneous skill sets, centrally planned economies is just wrong and short sighted.

Just one more quick datapoint. India's USD reserves at $275 billion places it on the 10th highest dollar reserves country in the world. At no. 2 is Eurozone (bunch of countries) and 2 other oil producing nations. Remove these two entities (India has barely any oil and it imports all its needs) India is well within top ten dollar reserves countries in the world.

Regards
M Ashok, CFA

RR
Ron Rimkus, CFA (not verified)
29th August 2013 | 9:10am

M Ashok, thank you for your thoughts and perspective. External debt denominated in USD is approximately $220 billion. Reserves being greater than this external debt figure is a positive, but it does not guarantee that the falling rupee won't cause a problem for debtors. The Russian default in 1998 was similar (in this regard). To be clear, I am not suggesting that India will experience exactly what Thailand did in 1997. However, I am suggesting that the massively easy monetary policy of the past five years has created bubbles in Emerging Markets and we are only now beginning to find out where the problems are. Thanks again - great input!