Adapting to Achieve Growth

Three things we are watching

Diversification: Emerging markets (EM) are likely to remain beneficiaries should investors continue to diversify their portfolios in the year ahead. Investor allocations to emerging markets remain below benchmark weights,1 especially with regard to Chinese equities. While this was the right strategy in prior years, that changed in 2025. We expect portfolio inflows to support EM markets, which have clear attractions. These include a broad range of companies with exposure to artificial intelligence (AI) supply chains, select large markets with low trade exposure (India and Brazil), and attractive valuations relative to developed markets.

India earnings recovery: Indian equities' potential to reverse their 2025 underperformance relative to other EMs is partially dependent on a recovery in earnings. Consensus expectations for the Nifty50 Index in the year ahead is 15% earnings growth.2 An expected recovery in consumption and government spending should help drive this growth. Low inflation is creating room for a reduction in interest rates, which would also be supportive of a recovery in earnings.

Latin America (Latam): The fallout from US actions in Venezuela is likely to have an impact on investor assessment of risk premia across developed and emerging markets over the long term. In the near term, lower oil prices and a continued easing of inflationary pressure are likely to maintain the trend of lower interest rates globally, excluding Japan. While Venezuela may dominate headlines related to Latam in 2026, Brazil’s presidential election, scheduled for October, should also be a focus for investors.