Inflation Front and Center
05 April 2022
Rising inflation pressures in EM Asia signal that regional central banks might need to tighten sooner than expected. Peru declares a curfew in response to anti-inflation protests.
EM Asia inflation Pressures, Policy Reaction
Upside inflation surprises in several Asian economies caught our attention yesterday evening. The numbers might still look “low” compared to peers in EMEA or LATAM – Thailand’s prices rose by 5.73% year-on-year, South Korea’s by 4.1% year-on-year, and Philippine by 4% year-on-year. However, when we express headline inflation in standard deviations vs. 5-year history, the picture looks more pressing, especially in South Korea (2.6 standard deviations higher) and Thailand (3.75 standard deviations higher) - these are on par with LATAM! Rising inflation pressures signal that the region might no longer be able to stay on the sidelines (=unchanged policy rates), when the rest of the world is frontloading rate hikes.
LATAM Local Bonds' Outperformance
LATAM has been raising policy rates quite aggressively in the past months, and the improved policy cushion contributed to local bonds’ year-to-date outperformance. The region outranked all other emerging markets (EM) (with the sole exception of South Africa, see chart below), which is why we are watching the recent changes in central banks’ response functions (smaller than expected rate hikes in Chile and Colombia) with a great deal of interest. This week’s big inflation data dump – Colombia later today, Chile, Mexico, and Brazil later this week – will show whether this relatively dovish policy stance is justified.
Food Prices and Social Protests
In a more concerning development, we are seeing more reports about anti-inflation protests in EM. The Peruvian president was forced to declare a curfew on Tuesday (in the capital) after the protests spread and turned violent. These reports came on the heels of social unrest and the government’s resignation in Sri Lanka, and the dissolution of Pakistan’s National Assembly. Other vulnerable countries which are highly dependent on wheat exports from Russia and Ukraine – like Tunisia – are working very hard to get supplies from alternative sources (and arrange financing) to avoid the repetition of the Arab Spring. Stay tuned!
Chart at a Glance: LATAM Local Bonds On A Roll
Source: Bloomberg LP
Related Insights
07 April 2025
06 March 2025
20 February 2025
16 January 2025
07 April 2025
Trump’s tariffs spark trade war fears, fueling market volatility, inflation risk, and recession threats. With global retaliation likely, near-term growth is clearly at risk.
06 March 2025
Trump’s tariffs, AI’s next phase, and a potential U.S. gold revaluation could shake markets—investors who stay ahead of these transitions will be best positioned.
20 February 2025
China's AI breakthrough, persistent inflation, gold’s outperformance, and rising energy demand underscore a shifting investment landscape.
16 January 2025
In 2025, navigating turbulence means balancing tech innovation, inflation hedges, energy shifts, and risks from spending cuts and inflation.
05 December 2024
"Trump Trade 2.0" fueled U.S. equity and digital asset rallies, while real assets faltered under a strong dollar, with global markets reacting unevenly to pro-growth policies.