Reuters
Mon, May 19, 2025, 4:13 AM 1 min read
(Reuters) - J.P.Morgan upgraded its rating on emerging market equities to "overweight" from "neutral" on Monday, citing easing U.S.-China trade tensions and a softer dollar.
Last week, the U.S. and China agreed to a 90-day tariff reduction, with the U.S. cutting duties on Chinese goods to 30% from 145% and China lowering tariffs on U.S. imports to 10% from 125%, fuelling hopes of easing global trade tensions.
"De-escalation on US-China trade front reduces one significant headwind for EM equities," JPM analysts said in a note, adding that the stocks would be further helped by a weakening of the greenback in the second half of this year.
J.P.Morgan remains positive on India, Brazil, the Philippines, Chile, the UAE, Greece, and Poland within emerging markets, and sees a promising opportunity in China, particularly in technology stocks.
"While this is unlikely to be the end of trade noise, we think that the worst of it is likely behind us," the Wall-Street brokerage added.
The MSCI emerging markets stock index is up 9% so far this year, as confidence in U.S. assets, including the safe-haven dollar, has weakened amid concerns over President Donald Trump's erratic and aggressive policies.
The dollar index is down 7.5% so far this year.
EM equities have lagged developed markets by a cumulative 40% since 2021, according to the brokerage.
Stock valuations now look attractive as they trade at 12.4 times its 12-month forward earnings compared to developed markets' 19.1, JPM said.
(Reporting by Joel Jose and Rashika Singh in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Savio D'Souza)
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