Emerging market assets have once again become the "risk appetite window" for global capital. Against the backdrop of AI-driven gains in Asian tech stocks, coupled with a weakening dollar, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose about 1%, reaching a new all-time high; the MSCI Asia Pacific Index also simultaneously set a record.
Market Overview: Indices Near Peak from Asia to Latin America
This upward trend is not confined to a single market. Benchmark indexes in countries like South Korea, Mexico, and Brazil are hovering near historical highs, showing a "broad spectrum lift" characteristic. The market believes that Asia's advantage in the semiconductor and AI hardware chains is attracting global funds looking for diversified allocation to reinvest heavily.
Driving Factors: AI Narrative and Dollar Weakness Accelerate Capital Rotation
Institutional figures point out that the strength of emerging markets is related to two forces: First, the expectation of AI capital expenditure has spotlighted Asia's tech and semiconductor supply chain; second, the dollar's decline has prompted capital to shift from "crowded U.S. tech trades" to other regions and industries. Meanwhile, emerging market currencies are also relatively strong, with the MSCI-related currency index making slight gains; the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index has fallen about 4% compared to its peak last November.
Inconsistent Capital Flows: Sentiment Rises, but Positions Remain Light
It is worth noting that "rising quickly" does not equate to "full buying." The Goldman Sachs strategy team warns in a report that while there is growing optimism in meetings and surveys, actual allocations remain low. Even with significant year-to-date gains in South Korea's benchmark index, foreign funds continue to record large-scale net outflows; markets like India and Indonesia also see foreign capital sell-offs, indicating that flows are still diverging and shifting.
Future Observation: Supply Chain Reconfiguration and Valuation Gap Might Determine Market Longevity
Looking ahead, the market views two variables as critical: first, whether countries like Mexico, Brazil, and Vietnam can continue to benefit from global supply chain reconfiguration; second, the valuation discount of the Asian tech sector relative to similar U.S. assets, and whether it will transform into longer-term "repricing" momentum during the AI cycle. Historical experience shows that periods of dollar weakness often favor emerging markets for longer cyclical rallies.