Emerging Market Currencies At Mercy Of Fed's Taper

 | Oct 31, 2013 11:01AM ET

Many emerging-market currencies are vulnerable to severe selloffs the day the US Federal Reserve reins in its quantitative easing programme. The timing of the so called Fed taper – and possibly an emerging market crisis – is complicated by several factors.

Many emerging market countries have over-dosed on easy money from the central banks of developed countries. Some have ended up becoming addicted to those capital flows as current account deficits have swelled along with the misallocation of assets.

The timing of the Fed's taper is therefore vitally important to the health of many emerging market currencies such as ZAR, BRL and the TRY to name a few. If it was just down to US economic activity the timing of the Fed taper would be easier to call.

But politics considerably muddies the picture. The political theatrics in Washington, which will be back for an encore sometime in February 2014, are likely to complicate the Fed's tapering as it did this month. These political showdowns tend to sap economic confidence.