
Globally, the US continues to keep the emerging nations guessing with its quantitative easing taper plans however, broadly, there has been a revival in growth in the developed nations and among emerging nations India and China are still favourites as expressed in the recent report by the IMF after the G20 meet. The same is reflected in the performance of the stock indices with the stock markets for US and Germany trading near highs. The report also highlighted that economic distress in the Eurozone region is turning the corner. PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Spain ) are in better shape and in fact Ireland and Spain have been learnt to have left the bailouts and Portugal is about to follow suit in May while Greece is beginning to recover and might emerge out of recession this year. No wonder the same have been captured in the 10 year bond yields for the nations which peaked during 2011. One of the reasons also being that the ECB has kept the rates at 0.25% and promised to keep it low. The ECB in a way is encouraging banks to borrow more and the same is probably reflected in higher bond purchases in PIIGS nations in lure of higher bond yields. Probably, this is another reason which is driving the bond yields lower
While India has its own sets of problems, the recent rebalancing of the China’s economy to consumption led one, doesn’t seem to bode well with the world markets. Unlike other emerging nations, China has a current account surplus and doesn’t have to worry of the funds flowing out of the nation. However, there are concerns that the long standing stories of a hard landing of the Chinese economy have intensified. The China’s economy is finally slowing but there are fears that it might be a prelude to more disappointing stories. The monetary system is believed to be hardest hit if the fears of housing bubble and shadow-banking blow up. The Chinese yuan had to face the wrath of the global investors besides widening spread between sovereign yield to interest-rate swap (hovering at 2007 levels). The currency has so far appreciated against the US dollar when currencies from other emerging nations were falling like ninepins (particularly in August 2013). The concerns are further aggravated by comments from eminent investors, George Soros and Bill Gross highlighting that the China’s situation is similar to the US crisis in 2008. The facts were further corroborated by the weakening manufacturing PMI and industrial production data.
While it seemed that the worst is over for the world economy, there has been a new kid on the block, Ukraine. The country is heading for a financial collapse with almost a quarter of its estimated $73bn due for repayment over the next 18 months. Ukraine relied on Russia to buy some of its debt, but those bond purchases have been shelved amid tension between the two neighbouring nations. Russia is believed to have declared war and deployed troops in Crimea, an autonomous region of eastern Ukraine with strong loyalty to neighboring Russia. By late night on 2nd March, Russian forces are reported to have completed operational control of the Crimean Peninsula, however a single fire has not been shot yet. The tension started in the region after when pro-Russia leader Viktor Yanukovych was ousted on February 21. The developed nations have been weighing out options to bail out the nation but are skeptical unless Ukraine's new government is established—presidential elections are due May 25. U.S Secretary of State John Kerry condemned this act by Russia terming it as "incredible act of aggression." The present political tension can turn into bitter story after statements that U.S. is "absolutely" willing to consider sanctions against Russia and there is a speculation that U.S. may skip an upcoming G8 preparatory meeting in Sochi, Russia. The present tension might throw unpleasant surprises for the world economy (especially Europe) as Russia supplies about 25% of Europe's gas needs, and half of that is pumped via pipelines running through Ukraine. Thus, disruption and cut off of the gas flow will push up energy prices as Russia being the world’s biggest oil producer. Further, Ukraine being one of the world's top exporters of corn and wheat, the supply of grain to the World will be impacted. Ukraine's currency hryvnia hogged the limelight after falling to 10 year lows and crossing below 10 to a dollar. While Russia’s stocks, bonds and currency fell heavily following the turmoil. The ruble, already down nearly 10% this year, fell below 50 to the euro and 36.4 to the dollar for the first time