BlackRock Cuts Emerging Market Stance, Favors Eurozone Bonds Amid AI Concentration Concerns

Stock News
Jun 30

According to the latest mid-year global investment outlook for 2026 from BlackRock's research arm, the firm is expressing caution towards emerging market equities while showing optimism for short- to medium-term eurozone government bonds.

The rationale for the cautious view on emerging market stocks centers on the risk of excessive concentration in artificial intelligence exposure, while the firm believes market concerns over policy appear overdone when considering the interest rate outlook for eurozone bonds.

The world's largest asset manager has downgraded its view on emerging market equities for the next 6 to 12 months from "overweight" to "neutral." This adjustment is attributed to the high concentration risk in markets such as Taiwan, China, and South Korea, which are heavily exposed to AI-related companies.

The firm's investment research division stated in the report that "geographic diversification does not reduce concentration risk when multiple markets are tied to the same value chain. It is this concentration risk that led us to downgrade our rating on broad emerging market equities."

Last week, emerging market stocks suffered their worst weekly decline since early March, impacted by a renewed tech-led selloff that hit South Korean shares and growing expectations for a more hawkish stance from the U.S. Federal Reserve. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index is on track for its worst monthly performance since March.

Despite this, BlackRock maintains a positive outlook on U.S. equities, where technology stocks hold a significant market share. The report noted, "We seek broad AI exposure through U.S. tech stocks, which leads us to be overweight U.S. equities. Even if the ultimate winners are not yet clear, many are likely to emerge there."

The report reflects the views of the firm's senior portfolio managers and investment executives. Within fixed income, the company has upgraded its rating on eurozone short- to medium-term government bonds from "neutral" to "overweight," suggesting investors are overestimating how long monetary policy will remain in a restrictive (tight) state.

Winners and Losers

Concurrently, the firm maintains an "underweight" stance on long-term U.S. Treasuries. This is because persistent inflation, driven in part by massive spending on AI infrastructure, has eroded these bonds' role as safe-haven assets.

The report indicated that credit markets show almost no signs of systemic stress, with defaults contained and recovery rates remaining substantial. Within high-yield bonds, BlackRock favors higher-rated U.S. and European junk bonds over investment-grade debt.

Among high-quality bonds, the preference is for short-term corporate debt, as it carries less interest rate risk compared to long-term corporate bonds. The head of BlackRock Investment Institute stated in an interview that the transformation driven by AI could create more opportunities for selective investments within the credit sector.

He added, "I believe there will be much greater differentiation and AI disruption in that space, so within that sector, it will become a story about capturing alpha."

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