Emerging markets are not what they used to be – and neither should their allocation

 

 

Emerging Market companies now offer critical and often irreplaceable technology.

 

 

                                       

By Ladislav Sabo – J O Hambro Capital Management

15 June 2026

 

 

For decades, investing in emerging markets (EMs) followed a predictable playbook: track local politics and economies, commodity cycles and identify companies with the potential to succeed either in global export markets or fast-growing domestic markets.

 

But over the past three years, that playbook has been fundamentally reshaped by the explosive growth in AI semiconductors and the surge in AI-related infrastructure spending.

 

The US dominates the market of top-performance chip design through companies like Nvidia and AMD, as well as increasingly through in-house chip design by major semiconductor buyers like Google or Amazon, which are developing their own in-house AI accelerators.

 

 

On the other hand, emerging markets are home to the vast supply chain that these companies rely on. Regardless of which US company designs the leading-edge chip, it is, with few exceptions, manufactured by TSMC in Taiwan.

 

 

 

One exception is Samsung, whose smaller semiconductor foundry business is also based in an emerging market. Another is Intel, which still maintains its own manufacturing capabilities but has increasingly shifted some production orders to TSMC in recent years to remain competitive.

 

Emerging Asia’s presence is not limited just to chip manufacturing, however; it only starts there. Taiwan, Korea and China offer an ecosystem of companies with leadership in the majority of components found in AI servers, from memory, printed circuit boards, cooling, power supply units and other components to final design and assembly of AI servers.

 

This reliance on AI infrastructure from emerging Asia has transformed sectoral weightings and EM’s growth profile and subsequently return profile.

 

The tech weighting in MSCI Emerging Market Index is 36.8%, which is larger than the tech weighting of the S&P500 at 35%. EMs are now seeing an earnings boom they haven’t seen in the past 20 years (with the exception of rapid earnings recovery in 2010 after the 2009 shock so not a fair comparison) and this earnings growth is translating into returns.

 

EMs are finally outperforming developed markets after a very long time of lagging returns. Last year, the MSCI Emerging Markets index cumulatively returned 52.9%, beating both the MSCI AC World at 30.4% and the Nasdaq at 29.9%. The same patterns continue year-to-date.

 

This outperformance is not simply the result of slightly higher technology weightings, but also of a fundamentally different type of exposure within the technology sector itself.

 

While both the US market and emerging markets provide exposure to AI, a large share of US technology is concentrated in companies spending heavily on AI, such as Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft, where investors have increasingly questioned the returns on these massive investments.

 

Another large portion of US tech footprint is in software companies, but these face the risk that rapidly advancing AI capabilities could disrupt their existing business models.

 

On the other hand, tech companies in EMs rather present ‘picks and shovels’ of the AI revolution. While fierce competition to develop leading AI models has weighed on investor enthusiasm for US hyper-scalers, the resulting surge in capital expenditure has been a major tailwind for the ‘picks and shovels’ companies in emerging markets that supply the underlying AI infrastructure.

 

This divergence in AI exposure is likely to become even more pronounced following the eventual IPOs of companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic. Increasingly, the question of whether emerging markets can outperform the US market may come down to where the greater economic returns from the AI boom ultimately accrue: to the companies spending on AI infrastructure, or to those enabling it.

 

Despite the exceptional performance of emerging markets so far this year, returns have been heavily concentrated. Around 60% of the gains in the MSCI Emerging Markets index have been driven by just three stocks, TSMC, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.

 

That said, it would be a mistake to view the EM technology opportunity as being limited to these mega-cap names alone. Active portfolio managers continue to have access to a broad and diverse opportunity set across the EM tech ecosystem.

 

 

Emerging Asia is home to numerous global leaders supplying critical components for AI servers. Many of these companies are well positioned to benefit from rising dollar content as future AI accelerator platforms have (and will) drive increasingly demanding technology upgrades to support ever-higher computing power requirements.

 

 

 

AI has reshaped how asset allocators should think about emerging markets. Beyond their traditional cyclical characteristics, emerging markets now offer critical and often irreplaceable technology exposure through a deep ecosystem of companies underpinning the AI infrastructure value chain.

 

While market performance this year has been heavily concentrated in a handful of mega-cap names, it would be a mistake to view EM technology solely through that lens.

 

The large pool of EM companies in the AI supply chain creates a broad and evolving opportunity set for active investment managers, whose ability to identify these structural winners early may leave them better positioned to capitalise on this regime change than passive investment strategies.

 

Ladislav Sabo is a fund manager at JO Hambro Capital Markets. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.

 

Please Note:

This article is provided for information only. The views of the author and any people quoted are their own and do not constitute financial advice. The content is not intended to be a personal recommendation to buy or sell any fund or asset, or to adopt a particular investment strategy. However, the knowledge that professional analysts have analysed a fund or trust in depth before assigning them a rating can be a valuable additional filter for anyone looking to make their own decisions. Past performance is not a reliable guide to future returns. Market and exchange-rate movements may cause the value of investments to go down as well as up. Yields will fluctuate and so income from investments is variable and not guaranteed. You may not get back the amount originally invested. Tax treatment depends of your individual circumstances and may be subject to change in the future. If you are unsure about the suitability of any investment you should seek professional advice. 

 

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