
After a surge to record highs in January, emerging-market stocks may have already peaked for the year, according to Morgan Stanley.
There are eight reasons why the MSCI Emerging Markets Index won’t climb any further, analysts led by Jonathan Garner, the chief Asia emerging-market strategist based in Hong Kong, wrote in an 18-page report. The measure has overshot then fallen below the bank’s previously-set year-end target of 1,330.
The arguments include falling copper prices, moderating balance sheets of Group-of-Four nations, peaking sentiment on reflation, tightening liquidity in China, a steadying U.S. dollar, stalling earnings revisions, “euphoric” fund inflows and the relative performance of Korean stocks.
“If we are correct, the key to performance going forward is market, sector and stock selection,” the strategists said. “On the market side, we are most bullish India currently, with a favourable budget further boosting the outlook.”
Morgan Stanley’s bearish warning comes after the MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose as much as 10% in January to a record. The rally came amid optimism that vaccine roll-outs and further U.S. stimulus coupled with a dovish Federal Reserve would create perfect conditions for developing-nation stocks to outperform in 2021.
Strategists from Goldman Sachs Group Inc., UBS Global Wealth Management and Wells Fargo Investment Institute all added to the positive chorus last month, even as technical indicators began signaling stocks were overheating. The MSCI gauge has fallen about 2% from a Jan. 25 peak, trimming its year-to-date gain to about 7%. The measure rose 1% at 12:46 p.m. in New York on Wednesday.
Here is a breakdown of Morgan Stanley’s eight reasons why emerging stocks have peaked:
Catch all the Business News , Market News , Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint. Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates.
Oops! Looks like you have exceeded the limit to bookmark the image. Remove some to bookmark this image.