It was an emerging markets roller coaster this week. The Turkish lira hit fresh lows Monday versus the dollar, escalating fears of emerging markets contagion and driving shares of EM stocks lower. After a modest relief rally, major EM indexes sold off sharply Wednesday following weaker than expected economic data out of China, as well as weak earnings from Chinese technology giant Tencent. Thursday marked another small recovery as news surfaced that China and the US were open to resuming trade discussions, but it wasn’t enough to offset weekly losses in developing markets. US stocks were able to finish the week modestly higher.
Weekly Returns
S&P 500: 2,850 (+0.6%)
FTSE All-World ex-US (VEU): (-0.9%)
US 10 Year Treasury Yield: 2.86% (-0.01%)
Gold: $1,184 (-2.3%)
EUR/USD: $1.144 (+0.3%)
Major Events
Our Take
As if the trade war and Fed tightening haven’t created enough volatility this year, in walks Turkey and renewed fears of EM contagion. To recap, emerging market countries with larger amounts of dollar denominated debt have faced pressure this year amid the US Fed raising rates. The tightening has increased the cost of borrowing and fueled a rally in the dollar, making it more expensive for these countries to pay existing US debt.
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