JPMorgan, Aviva Shrug Off EM Rout on Bet for Soft US Landing

Investors including JPMorgan Asset Management, M&G Investments and Aviva Investors say they seized on the retreat in riskier assets at the start of the month to bolster their holdings of emerging-market bonds.

While a small chorus of fund managers warn of a new retreat if fresh US recession fears emerge, others are betting on a period of steady easing by the Federal Reserve that burnishes the appeal of higher-yielding assets in developing nations. The more risk-tolerant recommend locking in high yields in markets like Ukraine and Ecuador.

“Emerging market bonds can deliver — reasonably easily — a double-digit return this year,” said Pierre-Yves Bareau, London-based global head of emerging market debt at the JPMorgan unit, who oversees $52 billion in EM debt. “Four-hundred basis points is an attractive spread for investors, but it’s not a crisis spread.”

The bounce-back has been swift across asset classes. If the current pace of gains for emerging-market dollar sovereign and corporate bonds is maintained for the full year, they would deliver a return of more than 8%, a Bloomberg index shows. That’s almost double the rate for equivalent US bonds.

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