Emerging-Market Equities: The Steep Cost of Missing Out

staying invested

Emerging-market (EM) equities are off to a strong start in 2025, up 4.5% through March 14 in US-dollar terms. But investors could be excused for being wary. After all, emerging markets have struggled over the past decade.

Yet today, EM equity fundamentals are gaining momentum on the strength of upward-trending earnings estimates. And performance looks better from a longer-term perspective. Our analysis shows that, despite fluctuations, EM stocks have outpaced their developed-market (DM) counterparts since 2001 (Display). This long-term performance gap, coupled with the pratfalls of trying to time the market, makes it risky for investors to be on the sidelines, in our view—especially if emerging markets can sustain their recent gains.

Consider the cost: If an investor missed just 5% of their best-performing EM months since 2001—that’s just 15 months out of 290—EM equities would have underperformed DM equities by 3.0% on an annualized basis. Even missing five or 10 of EM equities’ best months during the 24-year period would lead to underperformance versus DM stocks. Bottom line: It’s better to stay invested.