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Forbes.com ran an article written by me today, discussing the potential for a bubble in sovereign debt, particularly that of emerging market countries.

When I started trading emerging market sovereign debt in the early 1980s, the big risk was non-payment. The danger of default always loomed over a deal. It was like buying a Japanese car or a transistor radio made in Taiwan in the early 1970s: cheap, substandard goods that would likely fail early and often. However, some countries we still label “emerging markets” have become economic powerhouses: China, India, Brazil and Russia for example, holding foreign exchange reserves respectively of $2,300 billion, $284 billion, $235 billion and $433 billion.

Today, more than $5 billion of emerging market debt (EMD) is traded daily and prices are sky high in both debt and equities. Since Jan. 1, 2009 the MSCI Total Return Emerging Markets Index is up 65.1%, outperforming the S&P 500 Total Return Index, which is up 17%.

Read on…


MarketFolly.com also featured my overview of the EMD market.

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