Macroeconomic variables matter and so does liquidity. External shocks (international interest rates) appear not to matter.
In the 1990s international bond issues from developing countries surged dramatically, becoming one of the fastest-growing devices for financing external development. Their terms have improved as institutional investors have become more interested in emerging market securities and better economic prospects in a number of developing countries. But little is known about what determines the pricing and thus the yield spreads of new emerging market bond issues.
Min investigates what determines bond spreads in emerging markets in the 1990s. He finds that strong macroeconomic fundamentals in a countrysuch as low domestic inflation rates, improved terms of trade, and increased foreign assetsare associated with lower yield spreads.
By contrast, higher yield spreads are associated with weak liquidity variables in a country, such as a high debt-to-GDP ratio, a low ratio of foreign reserves to GDP, a low (high) export (import) growth rate, and a high debt-service ratio.
At the same time, external shocksas measured by the international interest ratematter little in the determination of bond spreads.
In the aggregate, Latin American countries have a negative yield curve.
This papera product of the Development Research Groupis part of a larger effort in the group to study international transmission of financial crises in emerging economies. Copies of the paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Eany Oh, room MC3-456, telephone 202-473-3410, fax 202-522-1155, Internet address poh@worldbank.org. (31 pages)
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