Addendum 3: Stress testing worst-case scenarios

- assessing asset class performance in weak state regimes


Seamus Vasey is an analyst and portfolio manager with more than 21 years of investment industry experience.

ZAMBIA

After a solid period of growth in the 2010s, Zambia experienced a deceleration generated by deteriorating confidence, a worsening business environment, growing authoritarian/nationalistic tendencies by the government and, very significantly, consistent fiscal deterioration. Heavy external borrowing, coupled with an extremely poor efficiency rate and a lack of real political commitment to fiscal sustainability, finally resulted in a sovereign default in 2020. This has yet to be fully worked through, although a change of government, sustained austerity, and a much more constructive approach to reform and credibility are laying the foundation for a medium-term recovery of the economy.  

From a relative asset class performance perspective, there are a few elements to highlight:

  1. Figure 1 shows how relative asset class performances in Zambian kwacha (ZMK) have largely been a wash on a cumulative basis since 2014.

    Fig 01 Asset Class Performance_Zambia.png
  2. Figure 2 highlights that the notable exception has been the empirical performance of a persistent allocation to short-dated local Zambian bonds. There are a few contributing factors here. The most important was the explicit and forthright rejection of the debt restructuring of domestic currency sovereign bonds, despite domestic Treasury bonds comprising c. 30% of the total public debt stock. This allowed for a substantial re-rating of local bonds, producing a much steeper yield curve than before. But it’s really been high real rates for sovereign borrowing in kwacha that have served short-dated exposures particularly well. Indeed, between 2015 and December 2023, real yields here averaged over 10% – with minimal duration risk, and mostly quite slim term premia in Zambia in the past. This has proven an especially potent combination to ensure a persistent, steady compounder in domestic terms.

    Fig 02 Zambia High Short-term.png
  3. Yet, the continued longevity of such a favourable absolute and relative outperformer is undoubtedly questionable. The high level of real rates in Zambia is appealing to a wide investor base – yet isn’t economically sustainable for an extended period. The curve has a much more normal shape now; hence long-dated Zambian sovereign exposure should provide a return pick-up over short-dated maturities over time. And, the avoidance of a domestic debt restructuring was essentially a windfall for Zambian bonds – much of the additional real bond performance over the entire holding period is a result of this favourable outcome.

Disclaimer
SA retail readers
SA institutional readers

Global (ex-US) readers
US readers

Seamus Vasey is an analyst and portfolio manager with more than 21 years of investment industry experience.



Related articles

icon

The series concludes with a case study on Brazil, a discussion on what sets South Africa apart from the countries discussed in this series and broad guidelines for investors on asset allocation in so-called “worst-case scenarios”.

icon

In episode two, we ask if domestic equities will always preserve value in cases of severe countrywide decline and major macroeconomic instability.

Global bond rout puts local bonds under pressure amidst a deteriorating fundamental backdrop.