Hidden GEMs: Getting familiar with frontier markets

With compelling valuations and strengthening fundamentals, frontier markets are starting to move back onto asset allocators’ radars as the external backdrop improves. Emerging Markets Fixed Income Portfolio Manager Thys Louw warns that careful navigation is key but sees the potential rewards as substantial.

20 Feb 2024

20 February 2024. With a market cap of over US$1.4 trillion – similar in size to the c.US$1.2 trillion US high-yield market – comprising 50 liquid investable markets and with daily turnover of c.US$2 billion, the frontier debt market has reached the scale at which more significant capital deployment is possible. In fact, successive external shocks have brought frontier-market debt yields and spreads to historically high levels, as shown in the Figure below.

Historic yields across various fixed income asset classes, %

Historic yields across various fixed income asset classes, %

Source: Ninety One as at 31 December 2023, Representative indices shown. EM LC Sov = JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified, EM HC Sov = JPM EMBI Global Diversified, EM HC Corp = JPM CEMBI Broad Diversified, Frontier HC Index = JPM NEXGEM, Global Agg = BBG Global Aggregate, US High Yield = Bloomberg US High Yield Corporate, Frontier LC Index = Portfolio of equal weighted frontier local markets (Azerbaijan, Botswana, Costa Rica, Egypt, Georgia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Morocco, Mongolia, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Serbia, Sri Lanka, Tunisia, Uganda, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Zambia). For further information on indices please see Important information section.

Frontier-market fundamentals have been improving steadily over recent years, with growth, debt-to-GDP, and fiscal balances typically healthier than in some key developed markets.

Unsurprisingly, having faced significant pressure in 2022 and 2023 – with rising developed market yields, global recession fears and thinning liquidity weighing heavily on investor sentiment and causing external funding to dry up – a number of stressed frontier markets have defaulted. However, few now face refinancing risks, and the default cycle may well have peaked in frontier markets, unlike in many developed markets. While pockets of distress remain and successful navigation of the investment universe has become a more complex task, the potential rewards make it worthwhile.

Thys Louw, Emerging Market Fixed Income Portfolio Manager, Ninety One: “With external pressures easing, we’re really starting to see asset allocators re-engage with the frontier market opportunity.”

The term ‘frontier’ is often associated with a sense of the unpredictable, which in investment terms would equate to higher risk. Yet the reality is often more nuanced and requires an understanding of both the huge variety of economies this universe represents and the range of ways to access the opportunity set. Louw explains that significant differences exist in the risk and liquidity characteristics of local versus hard currency frontier markets, even for the same issuing country, and these often relate to investor participation and degree of market development.

“More broadly, the growth and demographic dynamics that favour frontier markets will see them continue to become a larger part of the global economy, and that frontier-market debt provides direct access to the long-term growth and development story. From a more cyclical perspective, as interest rate volatility declines, we expect to see an uptick in demand for relatively high yielding asset classes such as frontier-market debt”, said Louw.

In terms of the opportunity set, we still see potential in select hard currency debt markets where yields are well above those of similarly rated peers in developed markets, and where we see triggers for potential outperformance – such as Egypt (potential upscaled IMF programme). However, we are most excited about opportunities that are appearing in select local currency markets such as Uruguay, Paraguay, Kenya, Zambia - and we expect Nigeria to be added to this list over time. We believe these have the potential to offer significant risk-adjusted returns, with nominal and real yields remaining high across frontier markets and more benign external funding environments providing support for currency stability after a tough couple of years for select local currency frontier markets.

Louw concludes: “Frontier markets are currently at an exciting juncture where excessive premia meet improving fundamentals in a growing, under-invested and under-researched asset class. Informational asymmetries make detailed and diligent analysis vital, but frontier-market debt offers significant scope for attractive risk-adjusted returns for investors with the right expertise.”

Jeannie Dumas

Head of Communications ex-Africa

Laura Henderson

Communications Manager

Important Information

This communication is provided for general information only and should not be construed as advice.

All the information in this communication is believed to be reliable but may be inaccurate or incomplete. The views are those of the contributor at the time of publication and do not necessarily reflect those of Ninety One.

Any opinions stated are honestly held but are not guaranteed and should not be relied upon.

All rights reserved. Issued by Ninety One.

For further information on indices, fund ratings, yields, targeted or projected performance returns, back-tested results, model return results, hypothetical performance returns, the investment team, our investment process, and specific portfolio names, please click here.

Past performance figures shown are not indicative of future performance. Investors are reminded that investment involves risk. Investors should refer to the offering documents for details, including risk factors. This website has not been reviewed by the SFC. 

By clicking on the hyperlink of Investor relations below, you are leaving this website with information specific for retail investors in Hong Kong and entering the global website.

Please note that the global website is not intended to target Hong Kong investors. It has not been reviewed by the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (“SFC”). The website may contain information on funds and other investments products that are not authorised by the SFC and therefore are not available to retail investors in Hong Kong. The website may also contain information on investment services / strategies that are purported to be carried out by a Ninety One group company outside of Hong Kong.

Any product documents and information contained in this website are for reference only and for those persons or entities in any jurisdictions or country where the information and use thereof is not contrary to local law or regulation.

Issuer: Ninety One Hong Kong Limited
Email: [email protected] 
Telephone: (852) 2861 6888 
Fax: (852) 2861 6861