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This pace of the EM equity rally cannot continue. Can it? McGeever

South Korean shares have surged by 50% in the first two month of 2026, and other emerging markets are also showing double-digit gains. Even the most ardent EM bulls must wonder if this raging?rally will continue. South Korea's figures are stunning. The benchmark KOSPI has more than doubled over the past six months and is now up 175% since the "Liberation Day tariff chaos" of U.S. President Donald Trump in April last year. This is after a 75% increase in the calendar year 2025. Shares of Samsung, the top memory chipmaker in the world, almost doubled this year and more than tripled within six months.

The country has attracted capital due to its market-friendly regulatory and tax reforms, as well as its booming semiconductor and artificial intelligence industries. The Korean won was trading on Thursday at its highest level against the U.S. Dollar in four months.

Goldman Sachs says that the KOSPI has reached the lowest level of financial conditions in 24 years, since it launched the South Korea Financial Conditions Index.

It is possible that speculations are at work based on the rapid rise of KOSPI. Even though "FOMO",?might play a role, it's not the main story. KOSPI actually trades at its lowest multiple based on forward 12-month earnings since June.

Many investors buy because they are expecting to see a huge increase in earnings.

How bullish is too much? KOSPI's gains early in 2026 may be outliers, but the direction of travel is not. The MSCI benchmarks for emerging markets and Asia ex Japan are both up by 15% this year. Meanwhile, the main equity indexes in Taiwan and Brazil have risen by nearly 25% and 20% respectively.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, the largest maker of chips for AI applications in the world, is a key player in the global AI supply chains of companies like Nvidia and Apple.

Taiwan's Statistics Office has just increased the country's GDP growth forecast for 2026 from 3.5% to 7.7%, reflecting the anticipated AI windfall. This is a remarkable revision within a short time.

All of this suggests that the supposed U.S. tech and AI advantage - which was once at the core of the "American Exceptionalism' narrative - has been rapidly eroding. Investors are reallocating their funds to emerging countries, particularly in Asia.

Bank of America's global fund manager survey revealed that in February, the?rotation away from U.S. stock and into emerging market stocks surged and investors are now most overweight EM shares they have been for five years.

The survey revealed that investors have the largest overweight in emerging markets.

Analysts at TS Lombard have a?certainly a commitment to the cause. Their EM equity allocation has reached a record high and is now double what they allocate to U.S. stock. They believe that investors have not been this bullish about emerging markets for more than 20 year.

This over-optimism is reminiscent of a bubble that's just beginning to form. If you believe that the global AI story is going to be a success for a very long time, as Nvidia's recent sales and outlook indicate, then this reallocation away from the U.S. would make strategic sense.

It may also make financial sense. Although the S&P 500 valuation premium remains high, it may have decreased a little this year. Despite the recent outperformance, EM stocks remain relatively inexpensive.

Capital may be able to continue flowing into emerging markets, given the relatively benign macroeconomic background of a softer US dollar, stable Treasuries Market, and a Federal Reserve that is dovish.

The rotation may still have some room to grow.

The opinions here are those expressed by Jamie McGeever. A columnist for. Open Interest (ROI) is your new essential source of global financial commentary. Follow ROI on LinkedIn, X and X. Listen to the Morning Bid podcast daily on Apple, Spotify or the app. Subscribe to the Morning Bid podcast and hear journalists discussing the latest news in finance and markets seven days a weeks.

(source: Reuters)