Emerging markets

A Century Without Data: Reconstructing Emerging Markets Equity History

20.May 2026

For U.S. equities, fixed income, and commodities, reconstructing long-term historical datasets is relatively straightforward, and we have already explored these challenges in several previous studies, including 100 Years of Multi-Asset Trend Following, Extending Historical Daily Bond Data to 100 Years, and Extending Historical Daily Commodities Data to 100 Years. Moreover, the broader methodology of reconstructing missing market histories shares many similarities with the techniques discussed in How to Replicate Any Portfolio. Emerging markets, however, represent a particularly interesting opportunity for historical reconstruction, as reliable long-term data is often unavailable for much of the 20th century despite the growing importance of these markets in modern portfolio construction and asset allocation. In this article, we present the framework we developed to extend emerging market histories in a consistent and economically meaningful way, enabling more robust long-term quantitative research and modelling.

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Systematic Tactical Allocation in Emerging Markets vs. U.S.: A Momentum-Based Approach

7.April 2026

The global investment environment is going through a period of meaningful structural change. The dominance of the U.S. dollar is increasingly being questioned, geopolitical tensions are rising, and macroeconomic uncertainty remains elevated. Together, these forces challenge the post-Global Financial Crisis environment in which U.S. equities consistently outperformed most international markets. As a result, investors may be approaching a turning point where relative returns between U.S. equities and international markets—especially Emerging Markets (EM)—begin to shift.

This research focuses on a practical portfolio allocation question: when should investors increase or reduce exposure to Emerging Market equities relative to U.S. equities? Building on our earlier work analyzing the EAFE-USA spread, we extend the framework to Emerging Markets. Our hypothesis is that the relative performance between U.S. and EM equities is not random. Instead, it shows patterns driven by momentum and broader market trends. These patterns likely reflect persistent capital flows and the gradual way macroeconomic information spreads across global markets.

Rather than relying on static asset allocation approaches, we develop a dynamic allocation model that uses momentum and trend signals to generate practical timing signals between U.S. and EM equities. Emerging Markets are particularly interesting in this context because they tend to experience stronger regime shifts and larger performance cycles than developed international markets.

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