Emerging Asia Bonds Are the New Standards for Fiscal Control

Bond investors worried about rising fiscal deficits are turning to an unusual haven: emerging markets.

While long-dated bonds in developed markets have come under pressure this year as investors grow wary about government spending, emerging-market bonds in Asia have become a hot pick. Yields have tumbled, foreign funds have flowed in and recent debt auctions have enjoyed strong demand, unlike a number of prominent developed-market sales from the US to Japan.

“Many countries in the region are expected to be hit by tariffs, but we haven’t seen them rolling out fiscal stimulus and most are maintaining low budget deficit targets,” said Yifei Ding, a portfolio manager at Invesco Hong Kong Ltd., who said emerging-market bonds now offer good value.

This investment thesis underscores the stark shifts that have taken place in global markets this year. When Treasuries were roiled in April by deep anxiety over tariffs, former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers said US bonds had started trading like emerging-market debt. Now, investors are increasingly turning to the real thing.

EM long bond