With the global macroeconomic implications of conflict in the Middle East dominating commentary around this year’s IMF/World Bank meetings, it’s easy to miss important signals for long-term investors in EM debt. With a combined 50+ IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings under their belts, our EM experts are well placed to look through the noise.
This year's Spring Meetings took place against a backdrop of heightened uncertainty – around the duration of conflict in the Middle East and its impact on the inflation and growth outlook. Yet a dominant theme was one of resilience, with many emerging market (EM) economies holding firm as pressure begins to weigh on Europe and beyond.
Faced with a major oil-price shock, EM economies told a consistent story of reaping the benefits of reforms and buffers built up over recent years. From Uruguay entering the crisis with inflation already below target and three months of strategic fuel reserves, to Benin’s successful macro adjustments under an IMF programme, many EM economies are on firm foundations. The result has been a notable absence of widespread stress across the EM credit rating spectrum.
That should not come as a surprise. For several years we have highlighted the structural reforms that have taken place across the EM universe – from Latin America to Africa, where policymakers acted decisively in setting a sustainable economic path after the pandemic. But in EM, the exceptions are always as important as the rules and this year’s annual gathering in Washington DC highlighted a diverse outlook for this increasingly heterogeneous asset class. As JPMorgan noted in its post-spring meeting commentary: “EM sovereigns have proven to be much more resilient to shocks than feared a few years ago, but at these valuations, selectivity must also be factored into the prevailing constructive bias.” 1
Three members of our EM Debt team travelled to Washington DC and we asked them to share their highlights and pointers for investors. Look out for our forthcoming EM Debt Indicator for more insights. Below you’ll find:
Visiting Washington, DC in the wake of the energy price shock, I braced for a very negative mood on the ground. Instead, I found cause for cautious optimism. The word ‘resilience’ shone out: the painful reforms that many of these markets have pushed through in recent years are paying off – creating valuable fiscal and external buffers. That is notable in frontier markets like Egypt and Nigeria, where structural change is clear to see.
This year was a reminder that we are living in a world where shocks have become more frequent and the initial reactions from African policymakers have been to not shy away from hard decisions relative to previous crises. From conversations with policymakers, I gleaned a growing recognition that the days of experimenting with unorthodox policies are limited; the focus has shifted to how countries can reduce fragility to these external shocks. While there will still be a role for the IMF, the key for frontier markets is to improve transparency, broaden fiscal revenues, increase quality of investment and diversify borrowing sources. More and more policymakers grasp this as the number of economies that provide a template/act as a role model continues to grow.
The IMF meetings provide an invaluable opportunity to meet many policymakers from central banks and ministries of finance over several days. The packed agenda also includes various discussions with IMF staff, which are particularly informative for investors – providing a candid assessment of the path economies are on. What stood out for me this year was the number of markets that – in today’s testing times – are reaping the benefits of prudent policymaking of recent years.
In addition to engaging with policymakers and IMF officials, the meetings in Washington also provide an opportunity to see and exchange views with many other investors. This is valuable as it gives a better sense of the temperature of the market and positioning – providing useful context for our own high-conviction views.
This year’s meetings really showcased the diversity of the Latin American opportunity set and highlighted some strong structural stories behind all the election noise in the region. Highlights included some of the larger economies in the region that are in a position of strength to weather the geopolitical shock. Brazil's terms-of-trade are increasingly supportive and the central bank is on the front foot, while the Argentina reform story is on track and the country's energy boom is set to accelerate.
Some of the most useful information is gained outside of formal meetings. In between official sessions involving IMF officials, central bankers, finance ministers and other officials, conversations with lower-level officials often provide an unpolished view of what's really happening domestically. This year, much of that colour centred on Colombia, where the public credit office's debt operations have generated considerable disbelief among investors. While the strategy has nominally reduced interest expenditures on paper, the erratic decision-making has left markets perpetually second-guessing the next move - in the process obscuring what are, in our view, deteriorating underlying fundamentals. The lack of transparency, and the likely transaction costs embedded in such a volume of operations, have only added to the unease.
1 JPMorgan, EM takeaways from the 2026 IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings, 21 April 2026.
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