--- title: "From Brazilian Real to Asian Tech Stocks, Is the Emerging Market Feast Coming to an End?" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/266168559.md" description: "Multiple popular trades in emerging markets have triggered collective warnings from asset management institutions due to excessive crowding. Arbitrage trades such as the Brazilian Real and the rise of Asian AI technology stocks have deviated from fundamentals, with valuations being high and volatility increasing. Institutions are concerned that once global risk sentiment reverses, foreign exchange and stocks will face downward pressure, and liquidity-weak frontier markets may also encounter a \"stampede\" withdrawal, potentially impacting overall market sentiment and cross-asset liquidity" datetime: "2025-11-17T10:30:56.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/266168559.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/266168559.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/266168559.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/266168559.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/266168559.md) # From Brazilian Real to Asian Tech Stocks, Is the Emerging Market Feast Coming to an End? Some of the most popular emerging market trades this year, such as going long on the Brazilian real and betting on artificial intelligence-related stocks, have raised concerns among asset managers due to overcrowding, warning that a pullback may be inevitable. Wells Fargo Securities pointed out that the valuations of Latin American currencies have diverged from fundamentals, making them one of the best arbitrage trades for 2025. Fidelity International expressed concerns about the illiquid African markets, believing that these markets will face risks once global volatility surges. Meanwhile, after Asian tech stocks experienced the worst sell-off since April earlier this month, Lazard Asset Management is remaining highly vigilant. "Investors are overly complacent about emerging markets," said Brendan McKenna, an emerging markets economist and forex strategist at Wells Fargo in New York. **While the market may continue to perform well in the short term, a pullback will eventually come.** He stated: > "Almost all forex valuations are too high and do not reflect the many risks lurking in the market." The combined effects of the Federal Reserve's interest rate cuts, a weaker dollar, and the artificial intelligence boom have driven the remarkable gains in emerging markets this year, but have also led to signs of overheating in many areas. The capital flows that initially fueled the rebound now pose a risk of sudden withdrawal and may affect global market sentiment, tightening liquidity across asset classes. ## Clear Signs of Overheated Gains **The gains in emerging markets have reached heights not seen in years.** The MSCI Emerging Markets Index has risen for several consecutive months as of October, marking the longest streak in over two decades. The index has accumulated nearly a 30% increase this year, on track for its best annual performance since 2017 (up 34%). However, historical lessons are worth heeding: after the surge in 2017, the index plummeted 17% in 2018, as a more hawkish-than-expected Federal Reserve, trade conflicts, and a soaring dollar collectively ended the overheating of emerging market stocks, arbitrage trades, and local bonds. Today, market optimism is similarly high. Reports indicate that an index tracking emerging market local currency bonds is heading towards its best returns in six years. A quarterly survey conducted by HSBC in September of 100 investors (managing a total of $423 billion in assets) showed that **61% of respondents were net overweight in emerging market local currency bonds, compared to a negative 15% in June.** Anthony Kettle, a senior portfolio manager at RBC BlueBay Asset Management in London, stated: > "As the year-end approaches, some investors may seek to take profits on successful trades for 2025, which could lead to increased volatility in the forex market." ## Asian Tech Stocks: A Wake-Up Call This month, Asian stock traders experienced firsthand the risks posed by extreme valuations and crowded trades. The once surging artificial intelligence-related stocks in the region suddenly plummeted, and although global tech stocks faced widespread selling, analysts warned that the risks are more pronounced due to the relatively high weight of the tech sector in some Asian market indices A **notable example is the South Korean Kospi index, which is expected to be the best-performing major stock index globally in 2025, with an increase of up to 70%.** However, with volatility soaring, the index once plummeted over 6% in a single trading day before recovering half of its losses. "The positions in South Korean AI-memory trading have become extremely tight," said Charu Chanana, Chief Investment Strategist at Saxo Markets in Singapore. After the tech stock crash, Rohit Chopra, Emerging Markets Equity Portfolio Manager at Lazard Asset Management in New York, has turned cautious. He pointed out: > "From a factor perspective, low-quality companies have consistently outperformed their high-quality peers. Historically, this divergence has not persisted, indicating that if positions continue to concentrate, a reversal may occur." ## Currency Arbitrage Trading Under Pressure **As one of the most lucrative trades this year, currency arbitrage trading is also beginning to show signs of pressure.** Taking the Brazilian real as an example, its arbitrage trading return this year has reached approximately 30%. However, options traders seem to be turning bearish, with the three-month risk reversal indicator measuring market sentiment rising to a four-year high earlier this month. Alvaro Vivanco, Head of FX Strategy at TJM, stated that the real is a typical asset that has performed well this year but has now become crowded in terms of positions, and the re-emergence of fiscal concerns in Brazil is another reason to be more cautious. Other Latin American currencies are facing similar situations. Wells Fargo's McKenna noted that **the pesos of Chile, Mexico, and Colombia also "look a bit expensive."** Data from the Bank for International Settlements shows that the trade-weighted value of the Colombian peso is at its highest level in seven years, exceeding the ten-year average by one standard deviation; the same indicator for the Mexican peso is 1.4 standard deviations above the average. Similarly, the Hungarian forint has seen a 27% return on dollar arbitrage trading this year, making it a standout in emerging markets. Its surge has been partly fueled by market bets that Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who has been in power for 15 years, may be ousted in the next election. Strategists Chris Turner and Francesco Pesole at ING Bank NV wrote in a recent outlook report: > "If the current government remains in power, the market may question the current long positions in the currency, putting downward pressure on the forint." ## Frontier Markets: Emerging Liquidity Risks As investors have withdrawn significantly from U.S. assets this year, some frontier market bonds have also benefited. However, asset management firms, including Fidelity International, are now warning about these markets. "What concerns me more are the trades that could crush the natural buyer base once a 'sudden rush for the exits' occurs," said Philip Fielding, Portfolio Manager at Fidelity He added that during periods of increased market volatility, markets such as Egypt, Côte d'Ivoire, or Ghana "may also lack liquidity." Data shows that the funds managed by Fielding have returned approximately 12% over the past three years, outperforming 84% of peers ## Related News & Research - [The AI Revolution and The 90s Internet Boom](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281005956.md) - [We chatted to Ray Dalio's AI clone. 'Digital Ray' was convincing until it made a bunch of weird and wonderful mistakes.](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280633504.md) - [Folk are getting dangerously attached to AI that always tells them they're right](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280988775.md) - [SharonAI Secures Major Long-Term AI Cloud Services Deal](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281363534.md) - [Economist: AI bubble has popped, but a rarer AI bubble grows](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281032131.md)