Emerging market bonds have suffered in recent months, but fears of a renewed currency and debt crunch are overblown.
Bonds are likely to take the upper hand over equities this summer, as liquidity dries up and economic growth slows.
Quantitative easing and its effects on fixed income markets are here to stay. Investors ignore that at their peril.
Compared to developed countries, emerging markets continue to have a lower debt-to-GDP ratio. But their debt is rising. Should we be worried?
China's onshore renminbi-denominated bond market is an emerging asset class of global significance.
“It’s been a tough few weeks with plenty to worry investors such as Italy and US trade tensions. But there’s no need to panic as yet,” says Luca Paolini, chief strategist at Pictet Asset Management.
We look at why the latest US sanctions are unlikely to be as harmful for Russia as the 2014 ones, reinforcing the investment case for Russia.
A peak in economic growth improves the outlook for bonds, but it may be too soon to call time on the equities rally.
Pictet Asset Management gibt die Auflegung des OGAW-konformen Fonds Pictet-Asian Corporate Bonds mit Domizil in Luxemburg bekannt. Der Fonds investiert an den asiatischen Märkten für Unternehmensanleihen. Diese Märkte weisen die beste Kreditqualität unter den Schwellenmärkten auf, und Asien gehört zu den wachstumsstärksten Regionen weltweit.
As tensions between the US and China over trade tariffs escalate, a potentially brighter picture of trade dynamics is emerging.