BlackRock’s February 2026 commentary makes a bold but disciplined claim: the forces that drove emerging market (EM) outperformance in 2025 are still in motion in 2026.
This is not a short-term rebound narrative. It is a structural thesis.
The MSCI Emerging Markets index delivered nearly 9% in January 2026 alone, its strongest January since 2012. That performance followed a “stellar 2025.” The critical question is whether this was a one-off catch-up trade — or something deeper.
BlackRock’s answer: deeper.
They anchor their optimism in three structural pillars:
For a family office allocating capital across cycles, this matters enormously. Cyclical rallies fade. Structural re-ratings compound.
And this report clearly argues we are in the latter.
Let’s break down the strategic logic embedded in the report.
A key insight: AI is now an EM growth driver.
The commentary explicitly notes that AI has broadened into markets like South Korea and Taiwan due to their semiconductor manufacturing dominance.
Even more important:
Translation:
The AI buildout is physically impossible without emerging markets.
This is capital deepening. Infrastructure buildout. Commodity demand. Hardware manufacturing scale.
For a strategic allocator, this transforms EM exposure from “higher beta trade” to “core AI infrastructure partner.”
That is a different asset class perception entirely.
The report references one of BlackRock’s structural mega forces: demographic divergence.
Advanced economies are aging. Many EM countries remain demographically advantaged.
India, in particular, is highlighted as sitting “at the intersection of mega forces”.
Demographics affect:
Long-duration capital should care deeply about this.
Aging developed markets require debt monetization or taxation. Younger EM markets generate productivity and internal demand.
This is a 20-year structural differential.
One subtle but critical insight in the report:
Improved fiscal policy in some large EM countries stands in contrast to the leveraging up happening in developed markets
This reverses the traditional EM risk narrative.
Historically:
Now:
This is why BlackRock prefers EM hard currency debt, particularly high yield.
Why hard currency? Because it reduces local currency volatility risk (e.g., Brazil elections) while capturing improved credit quality.
For sophisticated portfolios, that’s compelling asymmetry.
The report repeatedly references a stable to softer U.S. dollar.
A weaker dollar:
EM assets thrive in dollar plateaus or declines.
For family offices managing global liquidity, this is critical:
Dollar regime shifts redefine cross-border capital flows.
This is not a broad-based “buy EM index” call.
BlackRock explicitly emphasizes dispersion:
They are:
That dispersion theme is important.
This is a stock-picker’s and credit-picker’s environment.
Passive beta may not maximize opportunity.
The tactical and strategic calls section (pages 3–4) reinforces a broader thesis.
That final point is profound.
Market cap indexes overweight yesterday’s winners. Structural capital allocators must overweight tomorrow’s compounding engines.
If we translate this into a multi-generational capital framework, five strategic outcomes emerge:
AI, commodities, and demographic divergence suggest EM exposure should no longer be tactical filler.
It is now integral to:
That shifts how we size allocations.
In a world where long-duration Treasuries no longer hedge portfolios effectively (as the report notes), income must come from disciplined credit selection.
EM hard currency high yield:
This is attractive for capital preservation with carry.
2026 is not a beta year.
It is a selection year.
AI beneficiaries, commodity producers, supply chain winners, demographic tailwinds — these are not evenly distributed.
Families that deploy active strategies — or allocate to best-in-class managers — may outperform passive allocations materially.
The commentary makes something very clear:
Markets are reacting to AI as a real economic disruptor — not speculative hype.
This is key.
We are in a capital reallocation cycle driven by:
These forces change profitability regimes across countries and sectors.
Long-horizon portfolios must reflect that.
Developed markets are:
Emerging markets are no longer the fragile periphery.
They are manufacturing the future.
The most important line in the entire report may be this:
“We see bullish themes that drove EM outperformance in 2025 still playing out — though we favor selectivity as dispersion rises.”
This is not about chasing returns. It is about understanding structural positioning.
For a capital steward thinking in 7-generation horizons:
Emerging markets sit at the intersection of all four.
The strategic question is not whether EM will be volatile.
It is whether you want exposure to where global capital expenditure is physically being deployed.
And that answer, increasingly, is not New York or Frankfurt.
It is Seoul. It is Mumbai. It is Mexico City. It is São Paulo. It is Ho Chi Minh.
Capital flows follow infrastructure.
Infrastructure follows mega forces.
And mega forces are increasingly emerging-market anchored.