AI mania is now spreading beyond U.S. tech stocks, reaching emerging markets. Investors seeking safety in developing economies may find little protection.
Emerging market stocks have rallied alongside their U.S. counterparts. The surge is driven by demand for companies tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., a key AI chip supplier, has lifted Taiwan’s stock market. South Korea’s memory chip makers have also benefited from the AI boom.
Other emerging markets, including India and Brazil, are seeing increased interest. Their tech sectors are attracting capital from global investors chasing AI growth.
The risk is that these markets remain vulnerable to U.S. interest rate changes. If the Federal Reserve keeps rates high, capital could flow back to developed markets.
Geopolitical tensions also pose a threat. A slowdown in U.S.-China relations could disrupt supply chains and hurt emerging market exports.
Meanwhile, U.S. stocks rallied on signs of a potential debt ceiling deal. Optimism about a resolution boosted investor sentiment across global markets.
The AI rally is not a safe haven. Emerging markets are now tightly linked to the same speculative forces driving U.S. tech stocks.





