The conclusion of military operations between Iran and coalition forces has removed the primary geopolitical discount on emerging markets capital allocation, with Chatham House estimating $300 billion in institutional flows previously sidelined by Middle East conflict risk now eligible for deployment across EM equity and fixed income. Fidelity's Fundamental Emerging Markets ETF posted a 30% return through late May, reaching $43.45 before profit-taking, while benchmark EM indices absorbed their largest weekly inflows since Q4 2020.
The reallocation represents delayed positioning rather than fresh capital creation. Family offices and endowments held elevated cash allocations throughout Q4 2024 and Q1 2025, waiting for resolution of Iran's naval operations in the Strait of Hormuz and the broader regional military posture. With shipping lane normalization confirmed and energy supply chains stabilizing, allocators are executing pre-staged EM entry strategies originally planned for early 2025. The Invesco RAFI Emerging Markets ETF, which tracks fundamental weighting rather than market cap, saw $240 million in net inflows during the first week following ceasefire announcements, indicating smart-beta strategies are absorbing institutional size.
The forward effect matters more than the headline flow. EM fixed income spreads compressed 140 basis points against US Treasuries in the two weeks following conflict resolution, repricing sovereign and corporate credit across frontier markets that carried war-risk premiums. Indonesian rupiah bonds, Turkish lira corporates, and South African rand sovereigns all tightened materially. This spread compression creates reflexive inflows as relative-value desks chase yield and momentum funds follow spread trends. The second-order consequence is EM currency strength against the dollar, which further attracts flow as FX hedging costs decline and unhedged equity returns improve. The cycle reinforces itself until positioning becomes crowded or US rate expectations shift materially.
Allocators should monitor three specific catalysts over the next 90 days. First, whether the Federal Reserve maintains current rate guidance through July, which determines the carry advantage of EM fixed income. Second, whether crude oil remains below $78 per barrel, confirming energy supply normalization and removing inflation pressure on EM central banks. Third, whether China's export data continues sequential improvement, which correlates directly with broader EM equity performance given supply chain integration. Any reversal in these three conditions would truncate the capital flow cycle earlier than consensus expects.
The cleanest signal is positioning velocity, not absolute flows. EM equity ETFs absorbed $18 billion in April and May combined, the fastest two-month accumulation since pandemic recovery. That pace matters because it reflects institutional conviction rather than retail chasing. When family offices move this size at this speed, they're executing multi-quarter views, not tactical trades.