
(Credit: IMF Photo/Filmontary)
September 5, 2024/IMFBlog
By Paula Arias and Robin Koepke
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The reduction in Eurobond flows reflected a combination of tightening external financial conditions and pre-existing vulnerabilities in affected economies, such as fiscal and external sustainability challenges. Some countries with more robust fundamentals and policy frameworks were able to substitute foreign currency issuance with local currency debt, funded in part by domestic investors. Many countries responded by cutting investment to reduce imports, weighing on economic growth. Many countries also drew on their reserve buffers, which could reduce their ability to withstand future shocks.
Net Eurobond issuance has a strong negative association with advanced economy interest rates, approximated by the 10-year US Treasury yield. When bond yields in the United States and other advanced economies slumped during the pandemic, borrowers in emerging market and developing economies took advantage of cheap borrowing costs to issue debt.
During the subsequent tightening of monetary policy by the Federal Reserve and other major central banks, Eurobond inflows in many lower-rated emerging market and developing countries dried up as borrowing rates reached prohibitive levels. Eurobond issuance diminished even as the interest rate differential widened in favor of emerging market and developing economies, pointing to the importance of external interest rates for this type of capital flows.
This year, global interest rate conditions have started to become more favorable for borrowers, as central banks in several major advanced economies moved toward easing monetary policy. This supported a recovery in Eurobond issuance to $40 billion in the first quarter of 2024 as countries such as Benin and Côte d’Ivoire returned to the market. The onset of a Fed easing cycle may support an additional rebound in Eurobond issuance and a broader revival of capital flows to emerging market and developing economies.



