March 6 (Reuters) - Emerging market equity funds have posted steep declines this month as investors cut exposure to risk assets amid the escalating Iran conflict, making them among the worst performers across asset classes.
Based on LSEG Lipper calculations, equity funds focused on Pakistan, Chile, Greece, Colombia, Argentina, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia were among the biggest decliners over the past month, across the 518 categories tracked by Lipper.
The pullback follows strong gains in emerging markets earlier this year, driven by relatively cheaper valuations, solid growth prospects and a weakening U.S. dollar.
MSCI’s emerging markets equities index .MSCIEF has fallen more than 6% this week, compared with a 2.2% decline in the MSCI World Index and a 0.7% drop in MSCI United States.
Weekly flows data tracking about 13,000 emerging market equity funds showed inflows slowing to $5.8 billion this week, the lowest level in seven weeks.
Goldman Sachs said that if the disruption proves short-lived, the broader earnings impact may remain limited given the relatively resilient sector mix, and maintained its forecast for 25% growth in MSCI EM earnings per share in 2026.
"However, higher starting valuations following strong gains last year leave EM equity markets vulnerable to near-term correction risks,” the brokerage said.
EM equity funds on price performance over the past month https://reut.rs/4cvEejB
Weekly inflows into EM equity funds https://reut.rs/47fDZpj
(Reporting By Patturaja Murugaboopathy in Bengaluru. Editing by Jane Merriman)
((patturaja.muruga@thomsonreuters.com;))
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