What Do the U.S. Elections Mean for Emerging Markets?

For much of 2016, a unique alignment of push and pull factors has driven strong performance in emerging markets (EM). The election of Republican Donald Trump and Republican majorities in the U.S. Congress on 8 November, however, represents a pivot point: These factors may become more divergent and create a more challenging landscape for EM, with the potential for fiscal stimulus in the U.S., a more hawkish Federal Reserve and protectionist trade policies.

Some investors have reacted already: EM valuations and fund flows dropped quickly in the days after the election. In our view, however, the implications of the U.S. elections for EM are more nuanced. Differentiation within the EM asset class should persist, and the winners and losers may vary dramatically depending on which of the potential combinations of U.S. monetary, trade and fiscal policy play out.

One thing seems certain: Investors will need to be agile to manage the trickier backdrop.

Where we are

At present, the Fed shows no signs of moving away from its gradual policy of normalization, recognizing that fiscal stimulus remains hypothetical and will nonetheless take time to implement. Against this backdrop, higher-yielding EM countries with improving external accounts should continue to perform well, while low yielding EM countries with below-trend growth should continue to underperform.

The potential for a substantial fiscal stimulus, which President-elect Trump promised during his campaign, has market participants wondering if we’ll see a more hawkish Fed prompted to raise interest rates as inflation and the U.S. economy heat up. This would be a mixed bag for EM: the potential positive implications of rising U.S. demand for imports versus the negative implications of rising U.S. rates, which would likely strengthen the U.S. dollar and complicate the picture for EM assets.

Although there has yet to be any explicit mention of protectionist trade policies in the early commentary from President-elect Trump, they were an important part of his campaign platform, and global trade growth has been a seminal driver of EM performance in past economic cycles. Given that tensions around trade are rising across jurisdictions, the uncertainty about U.S. trade policy is enough to cast a shadow on the EM asset class.