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Key takeaways

  • Emerging market equities remain attractively valued and provide significant diversification benefits to investment portfolios.
  • The current dollar environment is advantageous for emerging market equities, both enhancing country-specific fundamentals and encouraging capital inflows to the asset class.
  • Structural growth factors such as advancements in technology and demographic trends continue to support long-term growth prospects in emerging markets.

Valuation

Emerging market equities have delivered strong results thus far in 2025, providing investors with year-to-date returns exceeding 30%. Despite this impressive performance, we believe the market recovery is still at an early stage, and that emerging markets (EM) continue to present significant upside, especially given their appealing valuations relative to developed markets. This valuation gap creates an opportunity for investors to tap into emerging market growth at favorable prices.

Exhibit 1: China—Valuation Opportunity Remains Compelling

Source: FactSet. Data as of October 6, 2025. Indexes are unmanaged, and not available for direct investment. Index returns do not include fees or sales charges.

Lower dollar environment

EM equities tend to benefit from a stable or depreciating US dollar, making current conditions favorable for the asset class. This is a function of lower US-denominated debt servicing costs, commodity exporter tailwinds and increased monetary policy flexibility facilitating falling interest rates and supporting economic growth. Additionally, this environment comes hand-in-hand with improved investor sentiment, fostering a virtuous cycle as increased foreign capital flows into the regions further enhance potential investment performance.

Exhibit 2: Sluggish Dollar Has Boded Well for Emerging Markets Equities

US Dollar Impact on Equity Performance Since 1974

Sources: FactSet, S&P, MSCI. Data as of September 30, 2025. MSCI EAFE and MSCI EM are net returns; MSCI EM data starts in 2001. Investors cannot invest directly in an index, and unmanaged index returns do not reflect any fees, expenses or sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator a guarantee of future results.

Long-term structural drivers

Investing in emerging markets offers exposure to many countries offering economic growth rates, which have generally been faster than most developed nations. Additionally, EM provides exposure to the following long-term structural trends.

  • China Recovery: The Chinese economy is in the early stages of a policy pivot from a focus on deleveraging toward one that targets growth. This creates company-level investment opportunities and encourages more global investor flows to return to China.
  • AI Demand: The launch of China’s DeepSeek chatbot sent shockwaves around the world, highlighting Chinese advancement and shifting assumptions about the cost and scale needed for cutting-edge AI. In addition to China, several other EM countries are key developers of components critical for AI development, offering significant investment opportunities.
  • India Growth: India could offer great upside potential, in our view, as it remains the fastest-growing major global economy, benefiting from a large and young population. Indian valuations have seen a correction back to long-term levels, reinforcing the importance of active management to gain exposure to company-level opportunities.

More broadly, EM equities provide exposure to companies benefiting from accelerated technological adoption, demographic shifts such as urbanization and the expansion of the middle class and financial inclusion. These businesses have world-class innovation capabilities across an array of sectors, all of which benefit from substantial investment in research and development and intellectual property creation. We believe these fundamental trends establish a robust foundation for ongoing economic development and corporate earnings growth in emerging markets.

Positioning and diversification

In addition to offering potential return upside, EM allocations offer potential diversification benefits that can reduce overall portfolio risk. EM stocks often have different economic cycles and sector exposures compared to developed markets, providing investors the potential for less correlated returns and better risk-adjusted performance.

Exhibit 3: Correlations Among Global Markets

Source: FactSet. Data as of October 6, 2025.Note: SPX represents the S&P 500 Index, MXEA the MSCI EAFE Index and MXEF the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. Past performance is not an indicator or a guarantee of future results.

Such diversification can be particularly useful in periods when other asset classes struggle. For example, emerging markets have tended to outperform the US market during periods of low US returns. Specifically, in the rolling 10-year periods since 1971 when the S&P 500 Index has returned less than 6% annualized, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has outperformed US equities every time while delivering an annualized return of 12.1%.1



IMPORTANT LEGAL INFORMATION

This material is intended to be of general interest only and should not be construed as individual investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy, sell or hold any security or to adopt any investment strategy. All investments involve risks, including possible loss of principal. There is no guarantee that a strategy will meet its objective. Performance may also be affected by currency fluctuations. Reduced liquidity may have a negative impact on the price of the assets. Currency fluctuations may affect the value of overseas investments. Where a strategy invests in emerging markets, the risks can be greater than in developed markets. Where a strategy invests in derivative instruments, this entails specific risks that may increase the risk profile of the strategy. Where a strategy invests in a specific sector or geographical area, the returns may be more volatile than a more diversified strategy.

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