Shifting Realities and Opportunities in Emerging Markets

SUMMARY

  • Many emerging markets have become more resilient for a host of reasons, and they no longer simply ride on the coattails of developed market growth and policies.
  • However, these positive developments are juxtaposed against a fresh set of challenges, namely increasingly procyclical liquidity provision by market makers, a rising propensity for populist policies and a temptation to rely on currency depreciation rather than structural reforms.
  • Given the sell-off in EM assets so far this year, we think value and risks are better aligned, although a highly differentiated approach is needed.

One truism spanning the last three decades has been that emerging markets are a leveraged play on global growth – often outperforming when developed markets (DM) are growing but susceptible to sharp downturns when DM conditions are less favorable.

While this trend remains intact, understanding what has changed in the wake of developed market financial crises and the shift in the geopolitical landscape in the past few years is central to defining the emerging markets (EM) investment opportunity set going forward.

The new reality is that many emerging economies have become more resilient for a host of reasons, and they no longer simply ride on the coattails of developed market growth and policies. However, these positive developments are juxtaposed against a fresh set of challenges, namely increasingly procyclical liquidity provision by market makers, a rising propensity for populist policies and a temptation to rely on currency depreciation as a substitute for much-needed structural reforms.