Emerging-Market Assets Rally as Doubts Mount Over US Growth

Developing-nation assets jumped on bets higher tariffs will slow the US economy and divert investment flows into other markets.

An MSCI Inc. gauge for emerging-market stocks ended the session 2.1% higher Wednesday, clocking its best day since September. Eastern European currencies and Brazil’s real saw the sharpest gains in a basket of peers tracked by Bloomberg, while the Mexican peso climbed as the President Donald Trump administration confirmed some levies on Canada and Mexico will be delayed.

Speculation that Trump’s trade war will end up hurting the world’s largest economy and enable more interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve has been driving the greenback lower, boosting risk assets. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell to its lowest since November, and investors from Ninety One to Lazard Assert Management predict emerging-market currencies have room to climb further.

“There have been key shifts in the US dollar narrative that will underpin further EM FX strength,” said Phoenix Kalen, head of emerging markets research at Societe Generale in London. “The dollar appears to be losing some of its safe haven appeal.”

The greater resilience of developing currencies has been driven by worsening expectations for the US economy and rising optimism about Europe’s fiscal shifts, Goldman Sachs strategists wrote in a note.

Polish and Hungarian equities jumped alongside other European stock markets as Germany announced plans to unlock hundreds of billions of euros for defense and infrastructure investments in a dramatic shift from its traditional fiscal stance. Chinese stocks also rose driven by technology names, after Beijing vowed to support the sector and set an ambitious 5% economic growth target.