- Emerging markets (EM) have delivered unique risk and return characteristics over the last 30 years but have recently faced a backdrop of changes in monetary policy, increased political uncertainty and concerns around international trade agreements.
- A hypothetical exposure-management strategy for EM using a handful of local, country-by-country futures contracts had a high level of tracking risk stemming from country and currency risk.
- EM futures’ liquidity has grown significantly and may be a consideration in managing EM exposure during normal and stressed times.
Emerging markets have been whipsawed by changes in monetary policy, increased political uncertainty and concerns around international trade agreements. Still, they have offered distinct return and risk characteristics for global equity investors. Compared to developed markets (DM), EM provided exposure to higher levels of economic growth, increased diversification and potentially a richer source for alpha opportunities, given scarcer sources of information, over the last 30 years.1 And, they continue to evolve, with the integration of domestic Chinese equities (A shares) into the MSCI Emerging Markets Index (here, used as a proxy for EM).
Still, managing EM exposures can be challenging. Consider that, from the perspective of economic exposure, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has over 46% of revenue sourced from China, as of Oct. 31, 2019. That’s more than the next 20 countries combined (see the exhibit below). Despite recent developments in accessibility of the Chinese markets, obstacles remain, which may make it difficult to replicate this level of exposure to the country. In fact, given that EM countries have tended to be less correlated to each other than the DM countries, replication of a benchmark required a long tail of country exposures — risking leaving investors with too many positions to manage and less liquidity than they were looking for.
Economic exposure to EM
Revenue exposure of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index as of Oct. 31, 2019.
These eggs don’t fit in one basket
Due to the lack of liquidity in fully replicating indexes linked to EM, one common approach for investors looking to access emerging markets as a whole or hedge out EM risk was through a basket of liquid local futures contracts. For illustration purposes, we used the MSCI Emerging Markets Long-term Risk Model to create a hypothetical optimized basket of the largest EM country markets (represented by indexes here, with no embedded currency exposure) to track the MSCI Emerging Markets Index (100% currency-unhedged index).
EM benchmark replication using a proxy basket of market exposures
Data as of Oct. 31, 2019. Residual risk of an optimized basket represented by the MSCI China A 50 Index, MSCI India Index, MSCI Russia Index, MSCI Brazil Index, MSCI Korea Index and MSCI Thailand Index.
As shown in the exhibit above, this approach introduced significant residual risk to currencies as well as countries, particularly during times of market stress. We found the ex-ante equity-market risk was almost 5.0%, while the currency risk was 3.3% and country risk nearly 4%. It may have been possible to reduce the equity risk further through exposure to various other countries, but investors may have faced liquidity issues sourcing futures to smaller markets. And institutional investors may not always consider other instruments — such as ETFs or swaps — as suitable, due to (borrowing) cost, funding requirements, regulations, time horizon or other considerations.
Liquidity and volatility in EM
As we’ve seen, there is a balance between sourcing liquidity and working to meet portfolio objectives. This may be especially true during times of market volatility. We examined whether using futures contracts linked to the MSCI Emerging Markets Index,2 may have taken unintended risk bets out of the equation and provided access to greater liquidity.
Liquidity of futures linked to the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has risen
Source: CQG.
To further examine the link between EM volatility and liquidity, we ran a short study (with data from June 11, 2011, to June 11, 2019) looking at the empirical relationship between EM futures trading volume relative to recent history and EM implied volatility, as measured by the Cboe Emerging Markets ETF Volatility Index (VXEEM).3 In the exhibit below, we plot:
- The maximum level of the VXEEM, to capture intra-month market events
- The monthly aggregate EM futures volume less the previous three-month average futures volume, to remove growth trend and seasonality of futures activity
We found futures volume spiked when implied volatility spiked, implying that investors turned to these futures for risk management needs during times of market uncertainty.
Liquidity rose with volatility
Source: Cboe Global Markets, CQG
Futures liquidity is a critical component of the global financial market’s ecosystem, and a lack of liquidity in EM futures led some investors to use a basket of liquid local contracts — which introduced a high level of tracking risk stemming from country and currency risk. More recently, EM futures’ liquidity has grown and may be a consideration in managing EM exposure during both normal and stressed times.
1Melas, D. 2019. “The future of emerging markets: 30 years on from the launch of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.” MSCI Research Insight.
2As of the end of November 2019, the futures linked to the undhedged MSCI Emerging Markets Index had exposure to 26 countries and currencies. The open interest in EM futures rose to 1.5 million contracts, from 1.3 million contracts in November 2018, representing around USD 79 billion of notional amount outstanding.
3From an exchange-traded perspective, funded instruments such as ETFs have been a natural choice for investors to manage EM exposure, given their higher levels of liquidity.
Further Reading
Using multi-country multi-currency futures in portfolio management
The future of emerging markets: 30 years on from the launch of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index