Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Author-Name: Julián Caballero Author-X-Name-First: Julián Author-X-Name-Last: Caballero Author-Name: Christian Upper Author-X-Name-First: Christian Author-X-Name-Last: Upper Title: What happens to EMEs when US yields go up? Abstract: This paper explores why some episodes of US yield increases result in investor retrenchment from emerging markets and others do not. To answer this, we identify episodes of sharp increases in US 10-year Treasury yields and explore under which conditions these are associated with negative outcomes in emerging markets. We focus on four outcome variables: local currency yields, exchange rates, equity prices, and portfolio fund flows. We find that increases in US yields are more likely to be associated with adverse outcomes in emerging markets when they reflect (i) a rise in the US term premium, (ii) coincide with dollar appreciation, and (iii) rising inflation expectations in the US and in EMEs. The effects of these variables are highly non-linear and economically significant as well as robust to a variety of sensitivity checks. Creation-Date: 2023-03 File-URL: https://www.bis.org/publ/work1081.pdf File-Format: Application/pdf File-Function: Full PDF document File-URL: https://www.bis.org/publ/work1081.htm File-Format: text/html Number: 1081 Keywords: monetary policy, international spillovers, term premium, US dollar Classification-JEL: F30, F36, F42, F65 Handle: RePEc:bis:biswps:1081