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When will emerging stocks finally emerge?

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When will emerging stocks finally emerge?

Many things have changed since I began as a fund manager in 1995. My bosses flew Concorde and we could smoke at our desks after 6pm as we pondered what to buy with our car allowance.

But so much more has stayed the same. When it comes to investing, US companies still trump all comers. Europe muddles along, as ever. And of course a new century dominated by emerging nations is due any second now.

When I say “just around the next corner” my children immediately assume the pub is miles away. So how anyone has managed to keep a straight face selling emerging market equities is one of the mysteries of finance.

Aside from a seven-year stretch beginning in 2002, developed market stocks have trounced them pretty much my whole career. So relentlessly dire have relative returns been, especially post-financial crisis, that when the word “emerging” is spoken, all I hear is a gurgling noise.

My ears have unblocked recently, however. First, because I’m conscious that beyond Asia and India my portfolio doesn’t have a penny in another emerging market (as defined by MSCI).

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No Latin America, Africa, nor all those places in central Europe you backpacked through after the Berlin Wall came down because they were basically free. That’s 15 per cent of the world’s 70,000 public companies, according to my Capital IQ database.

Second, I’m a contrarian. Global inflows into emerging market funds since January are 30 per cent down on this point last year, according to LSEG Lipper estimates, which in turn were two-thirds lower than 2021.

Then on Monday along comes Ruchir Sharma, chair of Rockefeller International, who wrote in this newspaper that “a major comeback is under way” and investors have “yet to respond”. He was persuasive.

To summarise, emerging economies are outpacing developed-world ones on an output per capita basis and no longer just because of China. Earnings are expanding faster, too — as are margins. All positive stuff, he said.

Sharma also reminded us that many western countries are heavily debt dependent, with expensive stocks to boot. Emerging economies in aggregate are less stretched. Likewise, their stock markets trade at deep discounts to developed equities.

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And yet and yet. The problem for me is that I remember reading such arguments back when I was wearing pinstripe suits (no belt, obviously) and Hermès ties. The buy-pitch never seems to change. 

Emerging nations have young and fast-growing populations! They want to buy more things! Companies are cheap and less reliant on dollar funding! Governments are reforming! The west’s apogee has passed!

So why haven’t these obvious facts — as true as when you could fly from London to New York in 3.5 hours as they are today — translated into emerging stocks outperforming old-world bourses?

They still might. But I fear the likes of Sharma misread the runes. Take the statistic that from next year more than 80 per cent of emerging nations will have output per capita growth exceeding that of the US — up from about half in the period between 2020 and 2024.

Sounds good apart from the fact this level was also reached in the first 15 years of this millennium, when emerging markets only outperformed their developed cousins for less than half the period. That’s also a quarter century of no relative progress.

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Meanwhile, median US household real income fell from $67,650 in 1999 to $63,350 in 2012 and real wages did nothing but move sideways. Over these years, however, the S&P 500 rose a fifth, a period which includes the dotcom bust and financial crisis.

Clearly there is more to equity prices than money in pockets — a point I have made often in this column. The mistake is equating volumes and value. Top line growth does not guarantee superior shareholder returns.

It doesn’t even guarantee rising profits. Think of what happens when demand surges for a product or service in Nigeria or Brazil (or anywhere for that matter). Capital flows in, competition increases, returns moderate.

And even that assumes all companies are trying to maximise their returns on capital. Often, bosses are more interested in empire building, market share, or paying themselves more. In many emerging markets, holders of equity are far down any priority list.

Another big mistake I think believers in emerging markets often make is also ubiquitous, but they make it with bells and sparkles on. And that is to forget that current prices discount the future many years and decades out.

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My pet crocodile knows that power, influence and wealth are shifting south and eastward — as my colleague Janan Ganesh reiterated in his column on Tuesday. The stats are clear. Demography is destiny.

Thus, the emerging world’s golden century is already reflected in prices to a large extent. Nor are valuations any more attractive just because they are at least 35 per cent lower on a forward price-to-earnings basis, say, than the developed world’s. Such claims are simplistic and mislead absolute investors, those focused on making money, as opposed to institutional investors more concerned with relative returns against a benchmark.

It’s not just that the MSCI world index, for example, is crammed full of insanely expensive technology stocks (the US now makes up 72 per cent of this index and IT a quarter), making any claim to be cheaper somewhat, er, rich.

The MSCI emerging markets index is itself skewed by a 25 per cent weighting to China which, due to an imploding real estate sector among other reasons, has a forward price/earnings ratio of nine times — flattering comparisons still further.

In other words, it is perfectly possible that the valuation discount between emerging and developing market stocks will narrow, but owners of the former still incur losses. Not good: investors such as me are not playing a relative game.

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If emerging equities are a bargain relative to history and their own fundamentals, however, that’s different. I will be exploring this next week.

The author is a former portfolio manager. Email: stuart.kirk@ft.com; Twitter: @stuartkirk__

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Satellite images provide view inside Iran at war

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Satellite images provide view inside Iran at war

Smoke rises over Konarak naval base in southern Iran on Sunday. The base was one of hundreds of targets of U.S. and Israeli forces throughout the country.

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Commercial satellite images are providing a unique look at the extent of damage being done to Iran’s military facilities across the country.

The U.S. and Israeli military campaign opened with a daytime attack that struck Iranian leadership in central Tehran. Smoke was still visible rising from Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s compound following the attack that killed the supreme leader.

An image by the company Airbus taken on Saturday shows the aftermath of an Israeli strike on Iran's Leadership House in central Tehran. Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the opening wave of attacks.

An image by the company Airbus taken on Saturday shows the aftermath of an Israeli strike on Iran’s Leadership House in central Tehran. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the opening wave of attacks.

Pléiades Neo (c) Airbus DS 2026

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Pléiades Neo (c) Airbus DS 2026

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Israel and the U.S. have gone on to strike targets across the country. Reports on social media indicate that there have been numerous military bases and compounds attacked all over Iran, and Iran has responded with attacks throughout the Middle East.

U.S. forces have also been striking at Iran’s navy. In a post on his social media platform, President Trump said that he had been briefed that U.S. forces had sunk nine Iranian naval vessels. U.S. Central Command did not immediately confirm that number but it did say it had struck an Iranian warship in port.

An image captured on February 28 shows a ship burning at Iran's naval base at Konarak.

An image captured on Saturday shows a ship burning at Iran’s naval base at Konarak.

Satellite image ©2026 Vantor


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Numerous satellite images show burning vessels at Konarak naval base in southern Iran. Images also show damage to a nearby airbase where hardened hangers were struck by precision munitions.

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Hardened aircraft shelters at Konarak Airbase were struck with precision munitions.

Hardened aircraft shelters at Konarak airbase were struck with precision munitions.

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And there was extensive damage at a drone base in the same area. Iran has launched numerous drones and missiles toward Israel and U.S. military installations in Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar. Many drones have been intercepted but videos on social media show that some have evaded air defenses and caused damage in nearby Gulf countries. In Dubai, debris from an Iranian drone damaged the iconic Burj Al Arab, according to a statement from Dubai’s government.

Buildings at an Iranian drone base at Konarak were destroyed in the strikes.

Buildings at an Iranian drone base at Konarak were destroyed in the strikes.

Satellite image ©2026 Vantor


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Iran’s most powerful weapons are its long-range missiles. The Iranian Revolutionary Guards have hidden the missiles deep inside mountain tunnels. Images taken Sunday in the mountains of northern Iran indicate that some of those tunnels were hit in a wave of strikes.

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Following Khamenei’s death, Iran declared 40 days of mourning. Satellite images showed mourners gathering in Tehran’s Enghelab square on Sunday.

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Esmail Baghaei told NPR on Sunday that Iran will continue to fight “foreign aggression, foreign domination.”

A White House official told NPR that Trump plans to talk to Iran’s interim leadership “eventually,” but that for now, U.S. operations continue in the region “unabated.”

A large crowd of mourners fill Enghelab Square in Tehran on Sunday, following the death of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike.

A large crowd of mourners fill Enghelab Square in Tehran on Sunday, following the death of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike.

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Video: What the Texas Primary Battle Means for the Midterms

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Video: What the Texas Primary Battle Means for the Midterms

new video loaded: What the Texas Primary Battle Means for the Midterms

The first battle of the midterm elections will be the U.S. Senate primary in Texas. Our Texas bureau chief, David Goodman, explains why Democrats and Republicans across the U.S. are watching closely to see what happens in the state.

By J. David Goodman, Alexandra Ostasiewicz, June Kim and Luke Piotrowski

March 1, 2026

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Mass shooting at Austin, Texas bar leaves at least 3 dead, 14 wounded, authorities say

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Mass shooting at Austin, Texas bar leaves at least 3 dead, 14 wounded, authorities say

Gunfire rang out at a bar in Austin, Texas, early Sunday and at least three people were killed, the city’s police chief said.

Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis told reporters the shooter was killed by officers at the scene. 

Fourteen others were hospitalized and three were in critical condition, Austin-Travis County EMS Chief Robert Luckritz said.

“We received a call at 1:39 a.m. and within 57 seconds, the first paramedics and officers were on scene actively treating the patients,” Luckritz said.

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There was no initial word on the shooter’s identity or motive.

An Austin police officer guards the scene on West 6th Street at West Avenue after a shooting on Sunday, March 1, 2026, in Austin, Texas.

Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman via AP


Davis noted how fortunate it was that there was a heavy police presence in Austin’s entertainment district at the time, enabling officers to respond quickly as bars were closing.

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“Officers immediately transitioned … and were faced with the individual with a gun,” Davis said. “Three of our officers returned fire, killing the suspect.”

She called the shooting a “tragic, tragic” incident.

Texas Bar Shooting

Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis provides a briefing after a shooting on Sunday, March 1, 2026, near West Sixth Street and Nueces in downtown Austin, Texas.

Ricardo B. Brazziell/Austin American-Statesman via AP


Austin Mayor Kirk Watson said his heart goes out to the victims, and he praised the swift response of first responders.

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“They definitely saved lives,” he said.

Davis said federal law enforcement is aiding the investigation.

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