Traders Hold Their Nerve to Ride Bumpy Emerging-Market Rally

Investors are betting the months-long rally in emerging markets has further to run even as tariff threats and escalating geopolitical tensions signal a rocky path ahead.

Money managers from Lazard Asset Management Ltd. to Pictet Asset Management Ltd. have been scooping up Latin American local bonds, Asian currencies and some high-yield sovereign debt. The optimism — fueled by fading concerns about Trump’s trade policies — got a fresh boost last week after a string of soft US inflation data reignited bets the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates more than once this year. That helped send the dollar to 2022 lows, pushing EM assets to extend yearly gains.

“Increasing momentum in the weaker dollar narrative and a still structurally elevated valuation for the dollar suggest there is much more room to go for EM local as an asset class,” said Chris Preece, a portfolio manager at Pictet. “Sure, there can be a pullback — but I don’t think we can say the move in FX has been over-extended.”

EM Currency graph BB

Emerging markets have been on a stellar run: currencies are having the best start to the year since 2009, stocks are beating the S&P 500 Index and local bonds are on a tear. The jump left the extra yield investors demand to hold junk-rated dollar debt from the developing world over Treasuries at the lowest in almost four years.

That has made assets more vulnerable to looming US policy risks and the escalating conflict in the Middle East. The latest reminder came at the end of last week, following Israeli airstrikes on Iran.