Emerging Markets Bring Optimism for 2026 After Stellar Year

Emerging markets are poised to start 2026 as a favored trade on Wall Street, with money managers betting a multi-year cycle of investment inflows is underway.

Leia em Português.

This year’s capital rush into the sector — the best since 2009 across all emerging-market securities — is a sign more investors are allocating to a sector that’s been out of favor after years of lackluster performance. For the first time since 2017, emerging stocks are outperforming US peers, the gap between its bond yields and those of US Treasuries have shrunk to the lowest in 11 years and carry trade strategies — which largely consist of borrowing in a lower-yielding asset to fund purchases in higher-yielding ones — have reaped the best profits since 2009.

Enthusiasm for the sector was on full view at Bank of America Corp.’s recent investment conference in London. The bank hosted 300 investors and found scant pessimism on emerging markets. The verdict from David Hauner, BofA’s head of emerging fixed income: “EM bears have gone extinct.”

What may be underway is a more fundamental shift in global investment flows. Portfolio managers are keen to diversify from the US, while also increasingly drawn by developing nations’ progress in cutting debt and taming inflation.

It’s a turnaround few saw coming. Until recently, investors were avoiding the asset class after years of weak returns and fearful of a US trade war. Money managers found it tough pitching it to clients, while hedge funds said they saw the best opportunities in betting against emerging markets.

“2025 was an inflection point,” said Sammy Suzuki, head of emerging-market equities at AllianceBernstein LP in New York. “The question a year ago was whether emerging markets were even investable, but that’s no longer a query we receive.”