Country Risk

Country Risk

Country risk refers to the uncertainty associated with investing in a particular country, and more specifically the degree to which that uncertainty could lead to losses for investors. In particular, country risk denotes the risk that a foreign government will default on its bonds or other financial commitments increasing transfer risk. Professional analysts who must assess such risk will often peruse MSCI index data, looking for correlation coefficients to find ways of measuring the effect of country risk in a particular location. In a broader sense, country risk is the degree to which political and economic unrest affect the securities of issuers doing business in a particular country. BlackRock Inc., for example, publishes the BlackRock Sovereign Risk Index (BSRI), a quarterly sovereign risk index that tracks current risk levels and trends for various countries and regions.

Country risk refers to the uncertainty inherent with investing within a given country.

What is Country Risk?

Country risk refers to the uncertainty associated with investing in a particular country, and more specifically the degree to which that uncertainty could lead to losses for investors. This uncertainty can come from any number of factors including political, economic, exchange-rate, or technological influences. In particular, country risk denotes the risk that a foreign government will default on its bonds or other financial commitments increasing transfer risk. In a broader sense, country risk is the degree to which political and economic unrest affect the securities of issuers doing business in a particular country.

Country risk refers to the uncertainty inherent with investing within a given country.
Country risk most often refers to the possibility of default on locally issued bonds.
The United States is considered the benchmark for low country risk.
Analysts may refer to MSCI Indexes, OCED reports, or rating-agency reports for help in analyzing country risk.

Understanding Country Risk

Country risk is critical to consider when investing in less-developed nations. To the degree that factors such as political instability can affect the investments in a given country, these risks are elevated because of the great turmoil that can be created in financial markets. Such country risk can reduce the expected return on investment (ROI) of securities being issued within such countries, or by companies doing business is such countries.

Investors may protect against some country risks, like exchange-rate risk, by hedging; but other risks, like political instability, do not always have an effective hedge. Thus, when analysts look at sovereign debt, they will examine the business fundamentals — what is happening in politics, economics, general health of the society, and so forth — of the country that is issuing the debt. Foreign direct investment — those not made through a regulated market or exchange — and longer-term investments face the greatest potential for country risk.

Weighing Country Risk

Most investors think of the United States as the benchmark for low country risk. So if an investor is attracted to investments in countries with high levels of civil conflict, like Argentina or Venezuela for instance, they would be wise to compare their country risk to that of the U.S. Professional analysts who must assess such risk will often peruse MSCI index data, looking for correlation coefficients to find ways of measuring the effect of country risk in a particular location.

Getting Help in Assessing Country Risk

Some international organizations evaluate the country risk on behalf of their member nations. For example, the Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), as part of its arrangement regarding officially supported export credits, publishes an updated list of countries and their associated risks for the purpose of setting interest rates and payment terms. In addition, the major credit rating agencies — Standard & Poor's (S&P), Moody's, and Fitch — all have their own lists of sovereign ratings, which also analyze fundamentals such as effectiveness of institutions and government, economic structure, growth prospects, external finances, and fiscal and monetary flexibility. Large investment-management firms also rate country risk in their specific business lines. BlackRock Inc., for example, publishes the BlackRock Sovereign Risk Index (BSRI), a quarterly sovereign risk index that tracks current risk levels and trends for various countries and regions.

Related terms:

Country Risk Premium (CRP)

Country risk premium (CRP) is the additional return or premium demanded by investors to compensate them for the higher risk of investing overseas. read more

Credit Rating

A credit rating is an assessment of the creditworthiness of a borrower—in general terms or with respect to a particular debt or financial obligation. read more

Institutional Investor Index

The Institutional Investor Index was a measure of sovereign credit risk, published biannually in the March and September issues of Institutional Investor magazine. read more

International Investing

International investing is an investing strategy that involves selecting global investment instruments as part of an investment portfolio.  read more

Learn How Legislative Risk Harms Business Profits

Legislative risk is the risk that government legislation can adversely affect the business of one or more companies or the holdings of a company. read more

Micro Risk

Micro risk is a type of political risk that refers to political actions in a host country that can adversely affect selected foreign operations. read more

Return on Investment (ROI)

Return on investment (ROI) is a performance measure used to evaluate the efficiency of an investment or compare the efficiency of several investments. read more

Risk

Risk takes on many forms but is broadly categorized as the chance an outcome or investment's actual return will differ from the expected outcome or return. read more

Sovereign Bond Yield

Sovereign bond yield is the interest rate paid to the buyer of the bond by the government, or sovereign entity, issuing that debt instrument. read more

Sovereign Debt

Sovereign debt is issued by a national government in a foreign currency in order to finance the issuing country's growth and development. read more