Wall Street Banks Say Emerging Markets’ Wasted Years Are Over

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(Bloomberg) -- Wall Street’s emerging-market faithful are finally seeing better returns after missing out for years as US stocks soared.

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Morgan Stanley Investment Management, AQR Capital Management, Bank of America Corp. and Franklin Templeton are among those betting the tables may finally be turning in favor of developing-market equities.

Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett calls them “the next bull market.” AQR predicts they’ll deliver local-currency returns of almost 6% annually in the coming five to 10 years, outpacing a 4% gain for US shares in dollars.

Despite the S&P 500’s rebound of recent weeks, the gauge was flat on the year as of Friday’s close, while an emerging-market equivalent is up 10%. The gain is kindling hopes that a decade and a half of thwarted promise — in which the US benchmark rocketed more than 400% versus a meager 7% advance for developing-nation shares — could be at an end.

Among the reasons: a struggling dollar, rollercoaster S&P and questions over the safe-haven status of Treasuries, all of which have investors increasingly looking away from the US as President Donald Trump’s trade war takes off. Concerns about ballooning debt and deficits, which prompted Moody’s Ratings on Friday to downgrade the US credit rating, add to the headwinds for continued US market outperformance.

Some investors seeking alternatives to the US market have headed to the Japanese yen, German bunds and euro, but those willing to accept a bit more risk are rethinking the practice of yanking cash from emerging markets and pushing it into the US at moments of stress.

“The depreciation risk of the US dollar is a wake-up call for investors,” said Christy Tan, an investment strategist at Franklin Templeton, who touts developing-nation debt as an alternative to US Treasuries. “We think the US exceptionalism is over for the time being.”

The dollar’s four-month slump through April means the local-currency gains cited by AQR get a boost when they’re converted back into the greenback. MSCI Inc.’s benchmark emerging-market currency index hit a record at the start of May after gaining about 5% this year.

“Finally now we have the catalyst,” said Jitania Kandhari, deputy chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, who declared two years ago that the era of emerging markets had arrived as she switched from US to EM stocks.