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Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favorite tales on this weekly publication.
The author is chief government of a geopolitical danger advisory agency and a former international minister of Panama
In December 1994, Mexico’s peso collapsed and took Latin America with it. The mechanism was easy: governments had borrowed in {dollars} they might not print, and when the foreign money cracked, the debt grew to become unpayable in a single day.
Economists referred to as it “authentic sin”: the lack to borrow in their very own foreign money. For 3 many years, it outlined Latin American bonds as a commerce you bought out of, not into. Then the Strait of Hormuz successfully closed with the Iran battle. And the area’s bonds largely didn’t flinch.
When the world goes on the lookout for shelter throughout an oil battle, the locations are predictable: the greenback, gold, short-term Treasuries. No person places Latin American sovereign bonds on that listing.
But because the greenback surged in March, the area’s common sovereign unfold didn’t transfer. There was no contagion. The reason being structural, not fortunate: as web commodity exporters borrowing in their very own currencies, these governments earned extra {dollars} from the disaster than they owed. This displays, too, the shift in borrowing profile. Brazil points 96 per cent of its sovereign debt in reals, for instance. Mexico, greater than 80 per cent in pesos.
And within the first quarter, with the Iran battle already beneath method, Brazilian native bonds returned 7.3 per cent in greenback phrases. Colombia, 4.2. Even Mexico, the regional laggard, eked out 0.3. All three carry the identical “rising market” label as Thailand, which fell 7.2 per cent, and India, which misplaced 5.9. Between the Brazilian and Thai bonds, there was a distinction of practically 15 proportion factors in efficiency.
The primary clarification for the disparities is geography. Asia takes 84 per cent of the crude that flows via Hormuz; Latin America takes just about none. When the strait closed, Asian economies absorbed the harm immediately: gas shortages, reserve drawdowns, foreign money stress. Latin America, against this, absorbed demand.
Brazil hit report oil output of 4.1mn barrels per day, a lot of it shipped to China. Argentina doubled its LPG exports to India. Guyana, producing 10 occasions what it pumped 5 years in the past, is turning into an essential producer when provide tightens elsewhere. The commodity windfall explains the upside. It doesn’t clarify why sovereign spreads stayed flat via the worst vitality shock in half a century.
Each oil shock in fashionable historical past has damaged Latin American bonds — 1973, 1979, 1990, 2008. The sequence was all the time the identical: a disaster drove the greenback up, commodity revenues collapsed and governments that had borrowed in {dollars} they might not print have been left holding the invoice. That was the unique sin. And now it’s largely gone.
Latin America’s sceptics will argue that the commodity windfall is just cyclical. If vitality costs normalise, the windfall fades. And the deeper vulnerability stays: politics.
Instability is just not a tail danger within the area. It’s a recurring characteristic. The very mechanism that now insulates these economies from greenback shocks solely works if governments stay credible. That’s by no means assured. However, at this second, they’re managing to venture that credibility. Javier Milei has introduced Argentine inflation from over 200 per cent to round 30 per cent since coming to energy on the finish of 2023. After being inaugurated final month as president of Chile, José Antonio Kast minimize ministry budgets throughout the board inside weeks of taking workplace.
It’s a comparable story in different international locations. Costa Rica has launched a ceiling on spending development relying on debt to GDP. And the Dominican Republic now has a proper cap that restricts spending development to not more than 3 proportion factors above the annual inflation charge.
Power value pressures arising from the Iran battle will check the resolve of those international locations and their self-discipline, notably if the battle is prolonged. However the area’s enhancements are getting more durable to dismiss.
Sovereign debt is just essentially the most seen sign. In a basket of 20 rising market currencies, the Brazilian actual is the best-performing this yr. The Argentine peso, as soon as the poster youngster of rising markets fragility, rallied towards the greenback whereas the Iran battle raged.
Geopolitical shifts are making it more durable to deal with all rising markets as one commerce. Most portfolios nonetheless do. Latin America exports commodities via Atlantic routes, borrows more and more in its personal currencies, and trades with each Washington and Beijing. In 1994, foreign money was the area’s vulnerability. In 2026, it has grow to be its defend. The unique sin was actual. The belief that it nonetheless applies is what’s outdated.
