Despite alarming geopolitical headlines concerning Venezuela, Iran, and US-NATO relations, emerging markets are showing resilience. Investors are largely ignoring this "noise," focusing on the strong cyclical backdrop: upward growth revisions, loose financial conditions, and supportive commodity prices. Markets are prioritizing the global economic outlook over political shocks unless those shocks directly threaten growth.
Emerging vs. developed market outperformance typically runs in 7-10 year cycles. The current 14-year cycle of EM underperformance is historically long, suggesting markets are approaching a key inflection point driven by a weakening dollar, cheaper currencies, and accelerating earnings growth off a low base.
While markets fixate on Fed rate decisions, the primary driver of liquidity and high equity valuations is geopolitical risk influencing international trade and capital flows. This macro force is more significant than domestic monetary policy and explains market resilience despite higher rates.
Investor appetite for emerging markets is in an ideal state: not euphoric, but recovering. Recent inflows of $25 billion are just a fraction of the $159 billion that flowed out over the previous 3.5 years, suggesting the recovery is in its early stages with substantial potential for further investment.
Stronger US growth isn't hurting EM currencies because growth is also being revised up globally in places like China and Europe. This prevents a repeat of the 'US exceptionalism' theme that typically strengthens the dollar and pressures EM assets, making the current environment less problematic for EMFX.
Contrary to a simple narrative of improved market sentiment, EM sovereign resilience stemmed from unexpectedly strong macro fundamentals. Better-than-forecast current account balances, export performance, FDI, and portfolio inflows were the primary drivers of stability, exceeding even conservative projections from two years prior.
A wide range of historically reliable leading indicators—including copper prices, non-traded commodities, Korean equities, and small-cap stocks—are all simultaneously pointing towards a strengthening global cyclical outlook. This alignment across different assets and regions provides a more substantive and reliable signal than any single indicator could.
Despite being at historically tight levels, EM sovereign credit spreads are unlikely to widen significantly from an EM-specific slowdown. The catalyst for a major sell-off would have to be a 'beta move' originating from a crisis in core US markets, such as equities or corporate credit, given the current strength of EM fundamentals.
Despite historically tight spreads and a record-breaking $56 billion in year-to-date issuance, the EM sovereign credit market has remained stable. This resilience, following a period of strong outperformance, suggests robust underlying investor demand. The market is absorbing the deluge of supply without significant spread widening, pointing to a constructive outlook and potential for further spread compression in lower-rated credits.
Unlike the 2021-22 cycle which coincided with post-COVID overheating, Latam economies now boast a more resilient backdrop with lower current account deficits, positive real policy rates, and moderated inflation. This strength, coupled with appealing valuations, provides a substantial cushion against political volatility for local rates markets.
The positive outlook on Emerging Markets is backed by tangible upward revisions to economic forecasts. J.P. Morgan has increased its growth projections for the Euro area and China, supported by strong PMI data and surprisingly robust Asian exports, which indicates a strengthening global cyclical environment favorable for the asset class.