Emerging-market stocks just crossed another grim milestone: They’ve tumbled to the lowest level in 36 years relative to US equities.
MSCI Inc’s benchmark for developing-nation equities slipped to begin the week as Israel’s retaliation against attacks by Hamas sparked fears of a broader conflict between the US and Iran.
That took the gauge, as of Monday’s close, to the weakest-ever level relative to the S&P 500 Index in data going back to 1987. The ratio has since recovered, with the emerging-market benchmark adding 2.3% in the past two days.
“Investors need to look beyond the benchmark index given the 30% China weight, as emerging-market performance ex-China has done much better than the index alone indicates,” said Jitania Kandhari, deputy chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley Investment Management. “Selective countries in EM are doing well.”
Broad emerging-market benchmarks have faced several headwinds this year, with the latest selloff in shares since July wiping out $1.8 trillion of shareholder wealth. The MSCI gauge erased all of its 2023 gains last month and is little changed for the year, compared with a 14% rally in the S&P 500.
The drop has come as traders bet that higher-for-longer interest rates in the US lead to further dollar strength, keeping pressure on riskier assets. China’s stumbling economy has also been central to recent underperformance, especially as the nation’s companies account for roughly a third of the broad emerging-market gauge.
“For the broader EM index to start outperforming, investors need to see concrete actions for a strong recovery from the Chinese administration,” said Ashish Chugh, head of global emerging-market equities at Loomis, Sayles & Co. in Boston.
The earnings
Read more on investmentnews.com