When Russia invaded Ukraine, vital grain export routes shut down in Ukraine’s Port of Odesa—causing global food prices to soar.
Since then, energy markets have been disrupted, leading European heating costs to skyrocket.
Meanwhile, global inflation is high, and central banks around the world are raising interest rates in response to rising price pressures.
This Markets in a Minute from New York Life Investments shows the world macroeconomic risk map in 2022 against a shifting economic landscape.
Macroeconomic Risk Map: the methodology
Macroeconomic risk is an overarching metric that takes into account many external risk factors that could impact investor portfolios and business valuations within a country.
These factors include items like monetary policy, trade flows, and the political climate.
In the data from Allianz Trade, a country’s macroeconomic risk is determined based on the following categories:
- Economic Risk: Indebtedness, monetary policy, economic structure
- Political Risk: Institutional independence, policy effectiveness, power concentration
- Structural Business Environment: Ease of doing business, regulatory framework
- Commercial Risk: Short-term demand disruption
- Financing Risk: Risk of short-term disruptions of accounts receivables
In the context of this data, each calculation for macroeconomic risk level is ultimately a proxy representing the risk of companies not making debt payments within a given country.
Increasing challenges
After the U.S. increased interest rates in the 1980s, many emerging markets fell into crisis as debt payments (denominated in U.S. dollars) rose.
Fast forward 10 years later, and rising U.S. interest rates triggered the Mexican peso crisis in 1994.
More recently, in 2013, when the Fed began tapering its bond purchases, it led to steep investment outflows from India, Indonesia, and Brazil.
Today, as U.S. interest rates rise at the fastest pace in decades, emerging markets are facing new pressures.
The good news is that some countries are absorbing the shock thanks to higher bank reserves and reasonable growth.
However, at the same time, high inflation and social unrest are fueling higher risks.
Given this complex picture, which countries and jurisdictions are at the highest risk as geopolitical tensions unfold?
Authoritarian rule has gripped Afghanistan, with the Taliban seeing its one-year anniversary of rule.
Argentina, also at high risk, faces over 70% annual increases in inflation which could rise as much as 100% by year-end.
After the invasion of Ukraine, Russia’s risk was moved to the highest level.
Despite sweeping sanctions across the ninth-largest economy in the world, GDP is projected to fall -3.4%.
Weathering the storm
Despite often facing their own challenges, many countries continue to be deemed to have low macroeconomic risk.
Several of these are in Europe, Asia, and smaller island jurisdictions, in addition to North America.
And Australia is among those countries in the low-risk category.
Although Taiwan faces increased tensions with China, the risk remains low due to strong institutions and stable multiparty democracy.
Still, China’s aim to govern the country could intensify and become more explicit.
Additionally, the United Kingdom has faced growing market instability after bold tax-cut announcements which were later abandoned.
Investors have grown uneasy, illustrated by the fall in the sterling and rising gilt yields, the yields on their government bonds.
In the U.S., rising interest rates could likely place added risk on corporate debt.
Today, U.S. corporate debt stands at 80% of GDP, up from 67% in 2007.
Roughly a third of this debt falls within the lowest investment-grade level, BBB.
However, reforms that followed the Global Financial Crisis required banks to follow stricter capital requirements, which has put regulated institutions in a stronger position to withstand market turmoil.
Future risks
With these factors in mind, the chart below looks at the top 10 geopolitical risks looking ahead, according to risk consulting firm Kroll.
The risk of Russia entirely cutting off gas supplies to Europe could present increasing challenges, especially in 2023 and 2024.
This year, Russia’s gas supplies to Europe have been reduced by half, causing energy prices to hit record highs.
The energy crunch has precipitated corporate bailouts, including one of the highest in Germany’s history.
Global food insecurity could also accelerate if a supply crunch worsens.
Russia and Ukraine supply 10% of the world’s calories and provide 26 countries with at least half of their grain products.
Another potential risk is the trend towards deglobalization.
While this can be difficult to measure, some data points towards this shift.
Over the past few years, world trade to GDP has stagnated after rising for several decades.
Guest author is Dorothy Neufeld, writer for Visual Capitalist. You can read the full article here.