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Opinion|TEMIT’s Andrew Ness on why emerging markets offer more than a short-term rebound

Underpinning investment in Emerging Markets right now is a performance story backed up by deeper structural shifts. That’s the view of Andrew Ness, Portfolio Manager of Templeton Emerging Markets Investment Trust (TEMIT), as he explains in this timely opinion piece for WealthDFM, highlighting how improving earnings quality, economic resilience and technological innovation are reshaping the long-term investment case for EM equities.

Over the past year, emerging market equities have delivered strong returns, with the MSCI Emerging Markets Index posting gains of close to 30% over the period. That improvement has naturally drawn attention, particularly from investors who had grown cautious after a long stretch of uneven performance. It would be easy to dismiss this as a cyclical rebound or a short-term rotation. I think that would miss the bigger picture.

Earnings growth drives the story

Equity markets are ultimately driven by earnings, and one of the more consistent features of emerging markets over time has been their ability to generate earnings growth above that of developed economies. Over the past 15 years, earnings growth has been the single largest contributor to emerging market equity returns, outweighing both valuation changes and currency effects.

What has changed is the quality and durability of those earnings. The drivers today are less dependent on commodity cycles or external demand alone and increasingly anchored in domestic consumption, technology adoption, healthcare provision and financial inclusion.

We see this reflected in how EM markets have responded to recent global shocks. Inflation spikes, aggressive interest rate cycles and geopolitical stress have tested all asset classes. Yet many emerging economies entered this period with stronger balance sheets, more credible monetary frameworks and higher levels of foreign exchange reserves than in previous decades. The result has been greater resilience and, in several cases, faster recoveries.

For long-term allocators, that distinction matters. It suggests that recent performance isnโ€™t an outlier but part of a broader structural story – one in which earnings growth, rather than multiple expansion alone, continues to do the heavy lifting.

A changing face of emerging markets

Perhaps the most underappreciated shift in emerging markets has been the transformation of their economic and market composition. Thirty years ago, EM exposure largely meant banks, energy companies and basic materials producers. Those sectors still matter, but they no longer define the opportunity set.

Today, emerging markets are home to many of the companies building the infrastructure of the modern global economy. Semiconductors manufactured in Taiwan and South Korea sit at the heart of digitalisation. Software engineers in India help global firms modernise their operations. Fintech platforms across Latin America and Southeast Asia are bringing millions of people into the formal financial system for the first time. Healthcare providers are scaling access and quality in rapidly ageing populations, while renewable energy developers are deploying capital at a pace that would have been unthinkable a decade ago.

From commodities to โ€˜new economyโ€™ leadership

When we look at market indices, this evolution is clear. โ€œNew economyโ€ sectors – technology, communication services, healthcare and consumer-oriented businesses – now account for more than half of emerging market equity market capitalisation, while commodities represent less than 15%.

That shift has materially altered the sources of earnings growth and the way EM equities behave across cycles. And it isnโ€™t just a statistical shift either – it changes the nature of risk and return. Businesses built around intellectual property, platforms and networks have different margin profiles, capital intensity and growth trajectories than traditional cyclicals. Historically, theyโ€™ve benefitted disproportionately from scale, urbanisation and rising incomes – trends that remain firmly in place across much of the emerging world.

Innovation and local insight reshape opportunity

One of the privileges of working in emerging markets is spending time with local teams who understand these changes from the inside. Over the past year, I have travelled to countries as different as Brazil and India. The contrasts are striking, but so are the common threads.

Brazil is a young, vibrant economy with a highly educated population and deep pools of entrepreneurial talent. India, for all its infrastructure challenges, continues to produce world-class engineers and technology businesses at remarkable speed. Today, emerging markets account for more than half of global patent grants, a share that has risen steadily over the past decade. That shift is being led in large part by North Asian companies in China and Korea, particularly in areas such as semiconductors, batteries and advanced manufacturing.

That matters for investors because it reshapes where future value is created. It also challenges the perception that emerging markets simply follow developed-world business models with a time lag. In many cases, companies are leapfrogging established approaches altogether.

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