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The eurozone gold rush into resurrected southern eurobonds

18 May 2014, 12:43 CET
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(PARIS) - The badly tarnished countries of southern Europe where investors dared not venture at the height of the debt crisis are now the focus of a rush into government bonds.

These countries, in various stages of slow resurrection from near disaster, have turned into a new eldorado for investors seeking relatively secure but satisfactory returns.

This flow of money, much of it withdrawn from emerging markets, has pushed up the euro, and also pushed down borrowing rates for these countries, a critical factor enabling Portugal to emerge from its bailout corset on Saturday.

Until the beginning of July, 2012, much of the debt issued by Greece and Portugal, both in rescue programmes, and of Spain and Italy considered to be in danger, was considered toxic by most investors, many of whom were barred by contracts with savers from holding such debt because it was rated as too risky.

- ECB turns the tables -

But in one breath, the new president of the European Central Bank Mario Draghi turned the tables, saying that subject to the progress with reforms being pursued, the bank was prepared if needed to buy vast amounts of eurozone debt.

This put a safety net beneath eurozone bonds and the euro, subject to tough conditions, and the announcement immediately reduced the risks of buying bonds issued by the stricken countries.

Already some speculative investment funds had bought into the debt of Ireland for example, the first country to emerge from a rescue programme funded by the International Monetary Fund and European Union.

Since the beginning of this year the flow of investment into the rejuvenated bonds has accelerated rapidly.

Countries with debt problems were tipped into crisis when the rates the markets charged to lend to them rose above 6.0-7.0 percent.

Rates for Spain and Italy recently plunged to record low levels below 3.0 percent, although poor first quarter growth figures released on Thursday sent them back above that level.

Portugal's borrowing rate has fallen below 4.0 percent.

This is because government bonds carry a fixed rate of interest for the life of the loan they represent, in the form of an annual cash payment set when the instruments are issued.

If perceived risk rises, and investors shun the bonds, the price of the bond falls. This automatically raises the value of the fixed cash payment or yield as a percentage of the lower price.

This process has zoomed in the opposite direction this year, with yields falling, for reasons which analysts say are rational even though these countries still face deep problems, as evidenced by the retreat of Portugal and Italy into economic contraction in the first quarter of the year.

Within the eurozone, the government bond market plays the role which the foreign exchange market used to play before the euro was created: when a country is in trouble, its bonds fall, when it gets back on its feet, its bonds rise.

"I don't think that this is a bubble. However, the yields have fallen far faster than analysts and even some investors thought," said Natixis bank bond strategist Cyril Regnat.

At HSBC France, the head of trading on the market for new government bonds, the primary market, Frederic Gabizon, said: "It is premature to talk of a bubble."

He said: "Markets do two things: they anticipate and they amplify. These factors are evident in the current situation on the eurozone bond market."

Investors have access to large amounts of cash owing to easy-money policy by central banks.

And they are looking for good rates of return relative to risk, having withdrawn large amounts of funding from emerging markets where growth is slowing and risks are rising.

This explains why some eurozone bonds, previously considered untouchable, are now the target of this gold rush, the analysts explain.

The underlying factor is that the economies of these countries in the southern area of the eurozone are beginning to show an underlying improvement, the fruit of traumatic reforms in the last few years.

"Investors are saying that the eurozone crisis is largely behind us. They are reassured by structural reforms in countries such as Spain, Italy or Portugal," Gabizon said.

- Virtuous circle, underlying trend -

This in turn has led credit rating agencies to raise their outlooks and even their notations for these countries, creating a virtuous circle.

"As always, at some point the market will probably stabilise or undergo a slight correction. But some of the most cautious institutional investors, some central banks or European institutions for example, have not yet re-entered this market segment," Gabizon said.

For bond manager Ronan Blanc at Quilvest Gestion investment managers, "a correction is possible but there are quite a few barriers to that."

Investors would be attracted to such instruments for as long as the yield on German bonds, the eurozone benchmark, remained far lower, and this was likely to continue for as long as central banks kept their interest rates at record low levels.

Even though economic growth was low and debt ratios were high in these countries, investors took the view that "other zones, such as the emerging countries, have bigger problems," Blanc said.

Regnat commented: "We are seeing an underlying trend, unless politicians throw us off track or if some countries allow their budgets to overshoot in a big way."

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NATIXIS

HSBC HOLDINGS


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