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The UAE is being phased out of major EM sovereign bond indices because it has become too wealthy. This technical rebalancing will force an estimated $7 billion in selling from passive funds. The redistribution of this weight will primarily benefit countries like Malaysia, Nigeria, Uruguay, and Saudi Arabia, while increasing Latin America's overall index share.
Emerging market credit spreads are tightening while developed markets' are widening. This divergence is not a fundamental mispricing but is explained by unique, positive developments in specific sovereigns like post-election Argentina and bonds in Venezuela on hopes of restructuring.
For traders, the defining characteristic of an emerging market isn't GDP but how its sovereign bonds behave during risk-off events. If bonds sell off alongside equities when volatility rises, it's an EM. If they rally as a safe haven, it's a developed market, regardless of economic metrics.
Contrary to fears of being a crowded trade, EM fixed income is significantly under-owned by global asset allocators. Since 2012, EM local bonds have seen zero net inflows, while private credit AUM grew by $2 trillion from the same starting point. This suggests substantial room for future capital allocation into the asset class.
Active management is more viable in emerging markets than in the US. The largest EM ETF (EEM) has a high 0.72% expense ratio, the universe of stocks is twice as large as the US, and analyst coverage is sparse. This creates significant opportunities for skilled stock pickers to outperform passive strategies.
After being 'shunned by the world for 10 to 15 years,' emerging market assets are benefiting from a slow-moving, structural diversification away from heavily-owned U.S. assets. This long-term trend provides a background source of demand and support, contributing to the asset class's current resilience against short-term volatility.
While a stronger growth environment supports EM currencies, it is problematic for low-yielding EM government bonds. Their valuations were based on aggressive local central bank easing cycles which now have less scope to continue, especially with a potentially shallower Fed cutting cycle, making them vulnerable to a correction.
While US equities have traditionally been a bellwether for global sentiment, a significant rotation is underway. Stagnant US tech stocks are being overshadowed by strong performance elsewhere, with European equities up 6% and Emerging Market equities up 13%. This suggests capital is flowing into other markets, reducing EM's dependence on US performance.
Due to compressed credit spreads, investors are shifting their focus from sovereign bonds to local market opportunities like currency and local bonds. They perceive fewer opportunities in credit and are actively seeking value in countries like Nigeria, Egypt, and Kazakhstan, where local stories are more compelling.
Standard emerging market benchmarks are misleading. Equity indices are heavily concentrated in a few countries, while bond indices suffer from inconsistent duration, ignore the vast derivatives market, and create unintended G10 currency bets due to their dollar-basing.
Despite a supportive macro environment, the most immediate threat to emerging market assets comes from increasingly crowded investor positioning. As tactical indicators rise, assets become vulnerable to sharp corrections from sentiment shifts, a dynamic recently demonstrated by the Brazilian Real's 5% drop.