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Ecuador Bond Rout Exposes How Hard Reform Really Is
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Ecuador's bonds have just delivered a harsh verdict on the country's politics. After voters unexpectedly rejected President Daniel Noboa's package of constitutional reforms, the dollar bond due 2035 fell by about 3.4 cents on the dollar in a single session – its sharpest intraday drop since February – and other maturities slid in sympathy.
For a market that had been up roughly 40% this year on hopes of steadier, more disciplined policy, it was a brutal reminder of how quickly optimism can vanish.
Going into the vote, investors had bought into a simple story: a young, business-minded president, tough on crime and willing to tackle generous subsidies, using institutional tweaks to make a fragmented system more governable.
Polls suggested his four proposals – a smaller legislature, an end to public funding for parties, permission for foreign military bases and a new constituent assembly – would pass comfortably. Instead, turnout was high and the answer to every question was no.
For bondholders, the problem is not just the defeat, but what it says about the country's capacity for reform. Markets had already absorbed earlier turbulence when Noboa scrapped a costly diesel subsidy, triggering protests and pushing the 2035 bond down around 2 cents in a day before it recovered.
Monday's 3.4-cent slide was bigger, and it came on the back of polls that clearly misread public mood. That raises doubts about whether any government can deliver predictable, pro-growth rules without being blocked at the ballot box or on the streets.
Ecuador's Politics Keep Its Debt Risk High
Behind the slogans, the battle lines are familiar. On one side, a push for cleaner public finances, clearer institutions and stronger tools to confront increasingly violent criminal groups.
On the other, entrenched political machines, social movements and online campaigns that mobilise quickly against subsidy cuts, foreign security cooperation and any hint of concentrated power – but rarely spell out how to fund stability in a dollarised economy.
For expats, foreign companies and portfolio investors, the message is straightforward. Ecuador's bonds pay high yields because the politics behind them are unstable.
The referendum rout shows that even leaders who talk about order and responsibility can be tripped up by short-term resistance, and whenever that happens the first place the pain shows is in the price of the debt.
For a market that had been up roughly 40% this year on hopes of steadier, more disciplined policy, it was a brutal reminder of how quickly optimism can vanish.
Going into the vote, investors had bought into a simple story: a young, business-minded president, tough on crime and willing to tackle generous subsidies, using institutional tweaks to make a fragmented system more governable.
Polls suggested his four proposals – a smaller legislature, an end to public funding for parties, permission for foreign military bases and a new constituent assembly – would pass comfortably. Instead, turnout was high and the answer to every question was no.
For bondholders, the problem is not just the defeat, but what it says about the country's capacity for reform. Markets had already absorbed earlier turbulence when Noboa scrapped a costly diesel subsidy, triggering protests and pushing the 2035 bond down around 2 cents in a day before it recovered.
Monday's 3.4-cent slide was bigger, and it came on the back of polls that clearly misread public mood. That raises doubts about whether any government can deliver predictable, pro-growth rules without being blocked at the ballot box or on the streets.
Ecuador's Politics Keep Its Debt Risk High
Behind the slogans, the battle lines are familiar. On one side, a push for cleaner public finances, clearer institutions and stronger tools to confront increasingly violent criminal groups.
On the other, entrenched political machines, social movements and online campaigns that mobilise quickly against subsidy cuts, foreign security cooperation and any hint of concentrated power – but rarely spell out how to fund stability in a dollarised economy.
For expats, foreign companies and portfolio investors, the message is straightforward. Ecuador's bonds pay high yields because the politics behind them are unstable.
The referendum rout shows that even leaders who talk about order and responsibility can be tripped up by short-term resistance, and whenever that happens the first place the pain shows is in the price of the debt.
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