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Saturday, January 31, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "Emerging Markets" (2 articles)

Gulf Times
Business

QNB: Macro environment still positive for emerging market in 2026

Qatar National Bank (QNB) said the global macroeconomic framework for 2026 remains supportive of emerging market (EM) assets, despite ongoing volatility. The bank emphasized the growing importance of careful investment selection, particularly as a new global investment cycle coincides with favorable monetary conditions and a potential rebalancing of portfolios. These factors position emerging market assets strongly to deliver positive performance and potentially outperform their counterparts in advanced economies over the coming year.In its weekly commentary, QNB said, "After a prolonged period of underperformance, 2025 marked an important turning point for emerging market (EM) assets. Strong capital inflows, improving macro-financial conditions and a more supportive global backdrop allowed EM equities to outperform US and other advanced market assets for the first time in several years. According to the Institute of International Finance (IIF), portfolio inflows to EM accelerated to USD 223 Bn during 2025, supporting total returns of more than 34 percent in EM equities. This rebound was driven by a weaker USD, easing global monetary conditions and resilient growth across several large EM economies."The bank pointed out, "Looking ahead, we believe that 2026 is likely to be another constructive year for EM assets. While idiosyncratic risks remain elevated and dispersion across countries is set to persist, the global macro environment continues to generate powerful "push factors" in favour of EM allocations. In our view, three global forces are particularly relevant."First, the global cycle appears to be turning in a way that is historically supportive for EM. After a period of synchronized slowdown and what many observers described as a "manufacturing recession," leading economies are showing early signs of cyclical recovery. At the same time, there is growing evidence of the start of a new, capital-intensive investment cycle, underpinned by powerful structural trends. These include the rapid deployment of artificial intelligence technologies, rising geopolitical competition in strategic sectors, renewed infrastructure spending and the acceleration of the green energy transition."Such capital-heavy growth phases have traditionally been favourable for EM through several channels. They tend to support demand for commodities and intermediate goods, improve EM terms of trade and lift export revenues. They also raise global risk appetite and encourage cross-border capital flows into non-traditional markets. Importantly, many large EM economies enter this phase with relatively sound macro fundamentals, credible policy frameworks and, in several cases, positive real interest rates, which help anchor investor confidence."Second, foreign exchange and interest rate dynamics remain broadly supportive for EM assets. Despite its recent depreciation, the USD remains overvalued according to standard real exchange rate metrics. Structural forces, including efforts to rebalance the US economy and reduce external deficits, suggest continued medium-term pressure on the greenback. A weaker USD reduces currency risk for foreign investors, eases debt-servicing burdens in EM and lowers risk premia across the asset class."In parallel, monetary policy in advanced economies is set to become more accommodative. Market pricing and consensus forecasts point to additional easing by the Federal Reserve, with the policy rate expected to decline towards 3 percent by end-2026. Lower US yields reduce the opportunity cost of investing in EM assets and tend to encourage carry trades into higher-yielding EM currencies. This dynamic has already been visible in 2025, with inflows concentrated in countries offering high real rates and credible policy frameworks, such as Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia and South Africa."Third, investors' overall positioning suggests that portfolio rebalancing could favor increased capital allocations to EM. Over the past decade, global portfolios have become highly concentrated in US assets, reflecting a long period of US economic outperformance, strong US equity market returns and the central role of US Treasuries in global finance."QNB explained, "As a result, many global investors are structurally overweight US assets, while allocations to EM remain comparatively low. For example, the weight of US equities in the benchmark MSCI All World is 64 percent, much above the country's share of global GDP of 26 percent. In contrast, the weight of EM equities is only 11 percent, despite EM GDP accounting for 41 percent of global activity."This concentration creates asymmetric risks and opportunities. Even relatively small changes in global asset allocation, such as marginal reductions in US exposure for diversification or risk-management purposes, could translate into sizeable capital flows towards under-allocated asset classes, including EM. Importantly, this does not require a negative view on US assets, but rather a normalization of portfolio weights after an extended period of US dominance. EM assets stand out as natural beneficiaries of portfolio rebalancing, offering diversification, higher growth potential and, in many cases, more attractive valuations than their advanced-economy peers."QNB concluded, "All in all, while volatility and selectivity will remain defining features of EM investing, the macro environment entering 2026 continues to look supportive for the asset class. The global investment cycle, favourable FX and interest rate dynamics, and structural portfolio rebalancing all point towards sustained capital inflows into EM. Against this backdrop, we expect EM assets to remain well-positioned for another year of solid performance and potential outperformance relative to advanced markets."

Gulf Times
Business

Several factors boost emerging markets' gains from capital inflows, says QNB

Qatar National Bank (QNB) stated that despite significant global macro uncertainty and volatility, emerging markets (EM) are benefiting from moderately positive capital inflows. These inflows have been driven by a depreciating USD, the current cycle of monetary policy easing across major advanced economies, and the availability of high real yields in several sizable EMs. In its weekly economic commentary, QNB said: We believe such tailwinds should continue over the medium-term, particularly as the US further engages in more efforts to re-balance its economy via lower external deficits and manufacturing onshoring. Over the last several years, emerging markets (EM) have suffered from significant volatility in capital flows. This was driven by monetary instability, geopolitical uncertainty and a lack of broader risk appetite from global investors on allocations to non-US assets. According to the Institute of International Finance (IIF), non-resident portfolio inflows to EM, which represent allocations from foreign investors into local public assets, experienced a significant shift from negative territory to positive in late 2023 and continues to be moderately strong this year, even accelerating. The strong performance of EM assets is surprising in a year marked by record global economic policy uncertainty and volatility. In fact, traditionally, EM assets tend to sell-off with increasing uncertainty, as investors seek safe-havens. But this time seems to be different, and two main factors contribute to explaining the inflows to EM. First, a softer dollar continues to bolster the attractiveness of higher-yielding EM assets, providing a tailwind for capital inflows. Under favourable conditions, global investors fund positions in relatively low-yielding currencies of advanced economies, such as the USD, and seek higher-yielding EM assets. A weaker dollar reinforces this tendency by reducing the currency risk for investing in EM. Furthermore, a weaker dollar lessens the burden of debt services of USD-denominated debt for sovereigns and corporates in EM, improving credit quality and reducing risk premiums, therefore favouring portfolio rebalancing towards EM assets. So far this year, the USD has fallen by more than 10% against a basket of currencies of advanced economies and 8% against a basket of EM currencies. Standard measures of currency valuations, such as the real exchange rates, show that the USD still remains "overvalued." Structural factors also point to an environment dominated by further selling pressure for the greenback. The Trump administration seems to be keen to engineer a major adjustment of the economy, favouring narrower current account deficits and the re-shoring of critical manufacturing activities, which would call for additional USD depreciation. This lessens the role of the USD and US Treasuries as safe havens amid global economic instability, contributing to calls for the diversification of portfolios, including via EM assets. Second, the easing of monetary policy by major central banks results in lower yields and looser financial conditions in advanced economies, increasing the relative attractiveness of EM assets. This year, the European Central Bank (ECB) continued its easing cycle, bringing the benchmark interest rate to a neutral stance of 2%, after cutting rates by 200 basis points (bp) since mid-2024. The Federal Reserve re-started its downward cycle with a 25 bps cut, with markets currently pricing a federal funds rate of 3% by the end of 2026, which will continue to diminish the opportunity cost for investing in EM assets. This backdrop of lower rates in advanced economies provides additional support for positive capital flows into EM. Third, several large EMs, particularly in Asia and Latin America, are currently offering yields that are significantly higher than their inflation rates. Those positive "real rates" from countries like Indonesia, Brazil, Mexico and South Africa, for example, contribute to providing higher gain potential and re-assure investors against potential risks of undue currency depreciation. This favours the so-called "carry trade" of borrowing from low-yielding currencies to invest in high-yielding EM currencies. Importantly, the carry trade seems to be the dominant feature of the capital flows to EMs so far in 2025, as the vast majority of inflows are concentrated in debt rather than equity and in jurisdictions with more floating currencies as well as higher real yields.