ECUADOR · MARKETS
Key Facts
—The milestone: Ecuador’s country risk fell to 396 points on June 3, its lowest since 2014 and the first break below 400 in about 12 years.
—The turnaround: Just over a year ago, in April 2025, the same gauge stood near 1,900 points.
—The gauge: Country risk is JPMorgan’s EMBI, the extra yield investors demand to hold a nation’s debt over US Treasuries.
—The drivers: The re-election of President Daniel Noboa, an IMF program, and a return to global bond markets all helped.
—The borrowing: Ecuador sold about $5 billion in bonds across two 2026 deals, returning after seven years away.
—The next target: Analysts watch the 350-point level, where a credit-rating upgrade could come into reach.
Ecuador country risk has fallen below 400 points for the first time in about 12 years, capping a dramatic swing in investor confidence driven by political stability, an IMF deal and a return to international bond markets.
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A landmark drop in Ecuador country risk
The number itself is a milestone. Ecuador’s country-risk gauge closed at 396 points on June 3, its lowest reading since October 2014.
It was the first time in roughly 12 years the indicator had broken below the 400-point mark, a level that had long sat out of reach for the country.
The scale of the turnaround is what stands out. Just over a year earlier, in April 2025, the same measure had spiked to around 1,900 points.
A fall of well over a thousand points in little more than a year is a rare swing, and it marks one of the sharpest re-ratings of any emerging market.
The slide gathered pace through late 2025, when the gauge broke below 500 points for the first time in years, and it has kept grinding lower since.
What country risk actually measures
For readers new to the term, country risk is a simple idea dressed in jargon. It is the extra interest a government must pay to borrow compared with the United States.
The benchmark is an index built by the bank JPMorgan, which tracks the gap between a country’s bond yields and ultra-safe US Treasuries.
When investors trust a country, they demand less of a premium, and the number falls. When they fear default, they demand more, and it climbs.
So Ecuador’s plunge below 400 is, in plain terms, a vote of growing confidence that the country will pay its debts on time.
It is also a relative measure, comparing Ecuador against other emerging markets, so part of the improvement reflects how the country now stacks up against its peers.
Why confidence came back
Several forces pulled in the same direction. The first was politics, as the re-election of President Daniel Noboa in April 2025 eased fears of a change in economic model.
Markets read the vote as public backing for a pro-business path, and Ecuadorian bonds rallied hard in the weeks that followed the result.
The relief was all the greater because the run-up to that vote had been tense, with the country’s debt priced for the kind of upheaval that ultimately did not arrive.
The second was the International Monetary Fund, which approved a review of its program with Ecuador this spring and unlocked a fresh disbursement.
An IMF stamp of approval matters beyond the cash it releases, since it signals to private lenders that the country’s public finances are being managed to an agreed plan.
The third was Ecuador’s return to global capital markets, after seven years in which it had been effectively shut out from borrowing abroad.
A fourth, quieter factor was an improving read on security, as investors took some comfort that the violence which had rattled the country was being contained.
Back in the bond markets
That return was striking. In January, Ecuador sold about four billion dollars in bonds, drawing orders many times larger than the amount on offer.
Demand from hundreds of global investors far outstripped the supply, a level of appetite that would have seemed unthinkable when the country was frozen out of markets.
It followed up in May with a second sale of around one billion dollars, at a lower interest rate than the first, a sign that demand was strengthening.
Together the two deals raised roughly five billion dollars, the clearest proof that international lenders were willing to fund Ecuador again.
Supporting figures rounded out the picture, with public debt easing as a share of the economy and foreign direct investment rising sharply over the past year.
The central bank also projects the economy will keep growing this year, a backdrop that makes the improving debt picture easier to sustain.
What it means, and what comes next
Lower country risk is not an abstraction. It means cheaper borrowing for the government, and over time that can flow through to companies and households too.
Every point shaved off the premium lowers the interest the state pays on new debt, freeing money that would otherwise have gone to creditors for spending at home.
The finance ministry framed the drop as a concrete gain, arguing it improves access to financing, supports investment and helps create jobs.
Analysts now watch the 350-point level, the threshold at which Ecuador might earn a credit-rating upgrade and borrow on terms closer to its steadier peers.
The caution is that confidence is fragile, and Ecuador’s gains still rest on holding the fiscal line and keeping its fragile security situation from flaring again.
Country-risk gauges can reverse quickly, as Ecuador’s own recent history shows, so the government will be keen to lock in the improvement rather than treat it as won.
For foreign investors weighing the region, the shift turns Ecuador from a cautionary tale into a recovery story, though one still carrying real political and security risk.
Whether the rally has further to run will depend less on headlines than on whether the country can keep delivering the steady, unglamorous discipline that earned it back.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Ecuador’s country risk now?
It fell to 396 points on June 3, its lowest since October 2014 and the first reading below 400 in roughly 12 years, down from near 1,900 in April 2025.
What is country risk?
It is the extra yield, measured by JPMorgan’s EMBI index, that investors demand to hold a country’s bonds rather than ultra-safe US Treasuries. A lower number signals more confidence.
Why has it fallen so far?
Mainly the re-election of President Noboa, an IMF program and disbursement, and Ecuador’s return to global bond markets after a seven-year absence.
Why does it matter?
Lower country risk means cheaper borrowing for the state, and potentially for companies and households, while bringing a credit-rating upgrade closer into view.
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