Emerging-market stocks — even in Venezuela — are rallying
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These ETFs can provide investors with growth and income opportunities outside of the U.S., at the cost of higher volatility and potential currency risk.
The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets Index Fund is a passive ETF and an intelligent proxy of the emerging market (China included). Learn more about VWO ETF here.
Emerging-market borrowers are taking advantage of a start of the year sellers’ market, with spreads narrowing over US Treasuries and investors piling cash into developing nations’ bonds.
As highlighted by Landmark Markets, global inflation eases to around 3 percent for the new year, down from 4.2 percent in 2025, pressure on households and businesses is expected to ease. With prices rising at a slower rate,
Emerging markets reached a clear inflection point, reversing multi-year underperformance as fundamentals, policy support and a weaker dollar aligned. Read more here.
Expanding into new markets sounds like an interesting challenge and an exciting prospect, but actually doing that requires quite a bit of forethought.
Emerging-market bonds are likely to be supported in 2026 as the securities are increasingly owned by local investors who are less exposed to currency risk and are therefore more resilient holders, fund managers say.
In the late 1980s, emerging markets were recovering from a lost decade. Multiple economies experienced a debt crisis. Inflation was high. Investors abandoned emerging markets and stayed with U.S. and developed markets, which were demonstrating much more stability and growth at the time.
Venezuela’s military held a mass funeral in Caracas as it began to bury dozens of soldiers slain during the United States' weekend operation to capture former President Nicolás Maduro