[go: up one dir, main page]

World’s biggest money managers favour emerging markets, Citi says

The MSCI Emerging Markets stock index is at a record high, while trading volumes in related exchange-traded funds have also surged.
Image: Bloomberg

Emerging markets are shaping up to be one of this year’s standout trades.

The world’s largest asset managers — overseeing more than $20 trillion of assets — are buying EM stocks, local currency bonds and credit on bets that strong global economic growth and a weaker dollar will favour these markets, analysts from Citigroup said after reviewing the funds’ published outlooks.

The shift also reflects a murkier backdrop in developed markets as policy uncertainty and fiscal concerns have weighed on sentiment, with bond yields surging in the US, Japan and Germany. The MSCI Emerging Markets stock index is at a record high, while trading volumes in related exchange-traded funds have also surged.

ADVERTISEMENT
CONTINUE READING BELOW

Citi said fund managers have added to long positions in equities across Asia, Latin America, as well as Europe, the Middle East and Africa. EM bonds are their top duration call, in contrast with short positions in US Treasuries and core European sovereign debt. In credit, EM debt carries the biggest overweight, while US investment-grade bonds remain a popular underweight, the bank said.

Even as global markets were rattled this week by concerns that artificial intelligence could disrupt large swaths of the economy, EM assets have continued to do well. The MSCI EM Index climbed as much as 0.7% to a fresh record high on Thursday, buoyed by a surge in Asian technology shares and a weaker dollar.

ADVERTISEMENT:
CONTINUE READING BELOW

A Bloomberg gauge of EM local currency government bonds has returned 2.2% so far this year, after annual returns of 8.5% last year that was the best since 2017. A similar index tracking sovereign dollar bonds is up 1.7% in 2026, after a 13% increase last year.

© 2026 Bloomberg

Follow Moneyweb’s in-depth finance and business news on WhatsApp here.

COMMENTS   0

You must be signed in to comment.

SIGN IN SUBSCRIBE

or create a free account.

Free users can leave 4 comments per month.
Subscribers can leave unlimited comments via our website and app.

Subscribe to our mailing list
* indicates required
Moneyweb newsletters
By subscribing, you agree to receive the Moneyweb emails you selected above. You can unsubscribe at any time. View our privacy policy.
Investor Challenge 2026 INSIDER SUBSCRIPTION APP NEWSLETTERS PODCASTS RADIO / LISTEN LIVE VIDEOS WEBINARS TRENDING
FOLLOW US: