Fate of billions in Turkey investments hangs in balance
Date
8/17/2016 8:45:17 AM
(MENAFN- The Arabian Post) The fate of billions of dollars in investments in Turkish bonds hangs in the balance as Moody's Investors Service prepares to reveal whether it's handing the country a second junk rating on its debt.
Moody's, which put Turkey on review for a downgrade immediately after a failed military plot to oust the government last month, currently ranks the nation's debt at Baa3, its lowest rung within investment grade. A rating review is scheduled for Friday and derivatives traders are already treating it as speculative, with the score implied by credit default swaps at Ba3, three steps into high-yield territory, according to Moody's Analytics.
If it cuts, Moody's will join S & P Global Ratings in assigning Turkey non-investment grade status, rendering its bonds ineligible for many international investors who are limited to holding low-risk assets.While JPMorgan Chase & Co. said a downgrade may drive forced selling of as much as $8.7 billion of Turkish bonds, even a decision to keep the rating unchanged will not assuage all investors if the outlook remains negative.
Whatever the outcome, "the market is much better off being short Turkey at the moment," said Cristian Maggio, head of emerging-markets research at TD Securities in London.
Below investors and analysts give their views on how Turkish markets will react to either outcome of the Moody's review.
* JPMorgan estimated $7.2 billion worth of Turkish sovereign bonds and $1.5 billion in corporate debt are at risk of forced selling in the event that the notes are removed from investment-grade indexes used by many investors as benchmarks for their portfolios.
Spreads between Turkey's foreign-currency debt and Treasuries may widen as much as 50 basis points with yields on the country's bonds climbing to 10 percent, said Viktor Szabo, a fund manager at Aberdeen Asset Management in London, who helps oversee about $10 billion in emerging-market debt. Yields on 10-year notes were 9.9 percent on Friday.