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This is a chapter from the Emerging markets: An evolving landscape paper. To read all chapters in this paper, click here.

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As the landscape within emerging markets (EM) continues to shift and adapt, we believe the possibility of EM’s positive returns appears promising. In this chapter, we highlight how the changing tides in US policy and macroeconomics may favourably impact the EM asset class.

  1. Core inflation has stabilised
  2. Policymakers have signalled that rates have peaked
  3. US dollar is expected to weaken following rate cuts

With the Federal Reserve fund target rate expected to fall over the next few years, we believe this will add to US dollar headwinds. Macroeconomic factors such as a surging federal debt levels and increasing fiscal deficits may add to US dollar weakness as well as the potential shift of allocation from US dollar assets to non-US dollar assets. Besides the overweight that allocators have to US equities, there are many other asset classes (such as Private Equity and Private Credit) which are largely dominated by US-domiciled firms and as such are predominantly US dollar-driven.

However, EM equities can also benefit from a strong US dollar environment. For export-dominated EM economies such as China, Korea, and Taiwan, a weak local currency is a net beneficiary to export economies (makes exports more competitively positioned). From a company perspective, there is also positive operational gearing. For example, for semiconductor companies in Korea and Taiwan, they often have local operations with local currencies and sell products to US clients in US dollars. This means that even in a weakening local currency environment, these companies and countries could see positive terms of trade and positive operating levers.

We think that a weakening dollar can support EM performance, given the widely-held belief that they are negatively correlated by market participants. We anticipate that this will remove a further headwind which EM economies have faced in recent years.