Bulls Seen Piling Into Emerging Markets as Momentum Returns

Shoppers at the Mandaue City Public Market in Cebu, the Philippines.

Emerging market assets look set to cap a banner year, with investors expecting inflows into equities and bonds to gain momentum in the final quarter.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Sentiment has rarely been this buoyant, with an HSBC Holdings Plc survey showing EM fund managers as the most bullish since the start of 2021 — when an everything rally was in full swing during the pandemic. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategists said EM markets are “thriving, not just surviving,” as economic growth this year surpassed expectations despite higher tariffs.

In a likely prelude to what may come, inflows into EM exchange-traded funds began to pick up toward the end of the third quarter. EM assets are facing a positive mix of factors that bode well for the months ahead: the Federal Reserve’s rate-cut cycle is creating space for central banks in developing nations to ease policy, while a softer dollar is encouraging a rotation away from US assets. China’s stock rally could bolster sentiment toward the broader EM universe.

“The outlook for the remainder of the year is positive for equities on improving growth outlook and China stimulus, as well as for local debt as EM central banks continue to cut rates from still-high real and nominal levels,” said Jon Harrison, managing director for EM macro strategy at GlobalData TS Lombard. “There should be solid inflows into EM assets to support currencies.”

READ: Emerging-Market Investor Inflows Are a 2026 Story, BofA Says

Crucial to the optimism are the Fed’s anticipated interest-rate cuts. In Asia, economists expect central banks from South Korea to Thailand to lower rates in the fourth quarter, with the move from Bank of Thailand seen as early as this week. Goldman analysts led by Andrew Tilton wrote in an Oct. 3 note that they expect lower policy rates across the region over the next year for Latin America.

Monetary easing, coinciding with a softer dollar, can provide a powerful backdrop for across-the-board asset gains. Bond inflows can gather pace while equities are supported by improving macro fundamentals. A weaker dollar can help ease the pressure on local currencies caused by lower interest rates.

An iShares ETF tracking EM dollar debt in September saw the biggest inflow since late 2023, while a product tracking the MSCI EM equity gauge saw inflows rebound to $2.2 billion after a slowdown in August. A derivatives index capturing positioning in the Brazilian real, Mexican peso and the South African rand — typical high-yielding currencies in EM — is near its most bullish since early 2024.

Continue Reading