Traders Cherry-Pick Latin America Bets on Split Rate Paths

(Bloomberg) -- Money managers are pitting Latin American assets against each other, hunting for winners as the region’s largest economies take opposite paths in the wake of the Federal Reserve’s first interest-rate cut in four years.

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Mexico’s central bank is expected to follow suit and lower borrowing costs Thursday, and there are growing calls for a deeper cut in Colombia, which decides on rates this month, amid subsiding inflation. Brazilian policymakers, meanwhile, kicked off a hiking cycle with a quarter-percentage point increase, and signaled there’s more to come as inflation expectations deteriorate.

The rate differential, investors say, will likely shore up the Brazilian real while its peers face pressure from imminent rate cuts. The real is trading near the strongest in a year against Mexico’s peso, rebounding from a 20-year low, and banks including BNP Paribas and Morgan Stanley are touting bullish positions in the Brazilian currency against the Colombian peso.

“People got used to synchronized monetary policy over the past four years — but it wasn’t that way before the pandemic,” said Jose Oswaldo Monforte, a portfolio manager at hedge fund Vinland Capital in Sao Paulo. “Relative-value bets in rates and currencies make a lot of sense in Latin America.”

Monforte’s Vinland, whose flagship fund has returned more than 54% after fees over the past five years, outperforming a basket of peers, is betting the real will fare better than the Mexican peso. Vinland, one of Brazil’s hedge funds expanding their reach to Mexico, is also betting borrowing costs there will fall more than what’s currently expected by traders.

These relative-value trades are becoming popular as geopolitical concerns and wavering growth cloud the global outlook and the path of the US dollar. Currencies from Mexico, Brazil and Colombia have weakened more than 7% each versus the greenback this year, among the worst in the world, as uncertainty over local politics and government spending plagues the region, making outright bullish bets risky. The real lagged emerging-market peers on Monday on concerns over the fiscal outlook, following three-consecutive weeks of gains.

One way around that is to bet on monetary-policy divergence as countries that slashed rates to record lows in tandem during the pandemic have begun to split.

Inflation picked up faster in Brazil, pushing it to be one of the first to hike and also to cut among major central banks. Now, traders are pilling onto payers, positions that profit from higher interest-rate futures, as they anticipate further tightening after last week’s hike. They’re also touting the battered real, which should become more appealing to carry traders as rates climb.