Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments

Includes bibliography

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Otros Autores: NU. CEPAL. Oficina de Washington
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: ECLAC 2014
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/28861
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spelling oai-11362-288612016-01-07T11:52:00Z Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments NU. CEPAL. Oficina de Washington BONOS GESTION DE LA DEUDA MERCADOS DE CAPITAL MOVIMIENTOS DE CAPITAL SISTEMAS MONETARIOS RECURSOS FINANCIEROS BONDS CAPITAL MARKETS CAPITAL MOVEMENTS DEBT MANAGEMENT MONETARY SYSTEMS FINANCIAL RESOURCES Includes bibliography Concerns about the ongoing U.S crisis in the housing sector and the asset exposures to subprime mortgages dominated financial markets in the second and third quarters of 2007. Volatility spiked in July and August, with losses in the subprime mortgage sector spreading to other risky assets. The volatility radiating from the United States is changing the global backdrop for emerging markets. This change comes after several years when the combination of improvement in country macroeconomic policies and strong risk appetites led to strong flows of new money to the emerging markets asset classes. Emerging markets and Latin American spreads widened in the second and third quarters of 2007. In the second quarter, the JPMorgan EMBI+ Latin American composite widened by 22 basis points. The widening was a result of higher spreads for Argentina, Ecuador and Venezuela, with spreads narrowing for all the other countries in the composite. In the third quarter, emerging markets and Latin American spreads widened as global risk appetite declined in face of increased volatility and spillover effects from the deepening of the U.S. housing sector's problems. The EMBI+ Latin American composite widened by 25 basis points, increasing for most countries in the composite. Argentina and Venezuela's bond spreads showed the biggest increases in the quarter. Spreads remain at low historic levels, however, and the recent increase in global volatility has put much less stress on emerging markets than it would have four or five years ago. Moreover, emerging market spreads are roughly half of the spreads on U.S. junk (high-yield) bonds, and have been under less pressure during the current turbulence in financial markets. 2014-01-02T23:41:57Z 2014-01-02T23:41:57Z 2007-10-25 Texto Documento Completo http://hdl.handle.net/11362/28861 LC/WAS/L.92 en application/pdf AMERICA LATINA LATIN AMERICA ECLAC
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic BONOS
GESTION DE LA DEUDA
MERCADOS DE CAPITAL
MOVIMIENTOS DE CAPITAL
SISTEMAS MONETARIOS
RECURSOS FINANCIEROS
BONDS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CAPITAL MOVEMENTS
DEBT MANAGEMENT
MONETARY SYSTEMS
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
spellingShingle BONOS
GESTION DE LA DEUDA
MERCADOS DE CAPITAL
MOVIMIENTOS DE CAPITAL
SISTEMAS MONETARIOS
RECURSOS FINANCIEROS
BONDS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CAPITAL MOVEMENTS
DEBT MANAGEMENT
MONETARY SYSTEMS
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments
description Includes bibliography
author2 NU. CEPAL. Oficina de Washington
author_facet NU. CEPAL. Oficina de Washington
format Texto
title Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments
title_short Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments
title_full Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments
title_fullStr Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments
title_full_unstemmed Capital flows to Latin America: quarterly developments
title_sort capital flows to latin america: quarterly developments
publisher ECLAC
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/28861
_version_ 1718436273765482496