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Emerging Markets Pulse — 2026-04-20

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Emerging Markets Pulse — 2026-04-20

Emerging Markets Pulse|April 20, 2026(9h ago)3 min read8.6AI quality score — automatically evaluated based on accuracy, depth, and source quality
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The IMF has slashed its 2026 growth forecast for emerging market and developing economies to 3.9%, down from 4.2% in January, as Middle East conflict drives up energy and food costs. Despite broad EM headwinds, India continues to stand out as a relative bright spot, while Q1 2026 data shows a notable resurgence of investor interest in international and EM equities.

Emerging Markets Pulse — 2026-04-20


Key Highlights

IMF Slashes EM Growth Forecast

The IMF's April 2026 World Economic Outlook — released at the Spring Meetings — cut the 2026 growth forecast for emerging market and developing economies to 3.9%, down from 4.2% projected in January. Under the assumption of a limited Middle East conflict, global growth overall is projected at just 3.1% in 2026, well below pre-pandemic averages. Global inflation is expected to tick upward in 2026 before resuming its decline.

IMF World Economic Outlook April 2026 cover image
IMF World Economic Outlook April 2026 cover image

Analysts at Seeking Alpha note the 2026 global real GDP growth forecast was reduced by 0.5 percentage points to 2.4% on some measures, with the Middle East and major energy-importing economies in Asia-Pacific and Western Europe facing the largest downward revisions.

Brookings' TIGER update frames it starkly: "Before the Iran war, the world economy appeared set for a year of growth. Now it has been thrown off track."

Oil tanker off Oman coast illustrating the Middle East conflict's economic impact
Oil tanker off Oman coast illustrating the Middle East conflict's economic impact

India: A Relative Bright Spot

India's growth is projected at 6.6% in FY2027 by the World Bank, even as higher energy prices and supply chain disruptions weigh on activity. India remains among the fastest-growing major economies globally despite the slowdown.

World Bank India economic outlook report cover
World Bank India economic outlook report cover

fDI Intelligence: Growth Persists in Most Economies

Despite the war-driven uncertainty, the IMF still expects positive growth in all but 10 economies globally — a sign that, while headwinds are severe, most EMs retain forward momentum.

Investment Flows: Investors Rotate Back to EM

BlackRock's iShares Q1 2026 ETF flow analysis found a clear resurgence in international demand, with a pronounced preference for emerging markets. International equities outpaced U.S. flows in January for the first time since early 2023, with international exposures accounting for roughly half of all equity inflows in Q1 versus just 20% the prior year.

imf.org

imf.org

worldbank.org

worldbank.org

imf.org

Press Briefing Transcript: World Economic Outlook, Spring Meetings 2026

brookings.edu

brookings.edu

imf.org

imf.org

worldbank.org

Global Economic Prospects

imf.org

World Economic Outlook, April 2026: Global Economy in the Shadow of War

imf.org

International Monetary Fund | April 2026 1 GLOBAL PROSPECTS AND POLICIES 1


Analysis

The Most Promising EM Opportunity: India

India stands out as the clearest near-term opportunity in the current environment. While the IMF is trimming forecasts across the board, India's projected 6.6% growth in FY2027 keeps it in a category of its own among major economies — most of which are struggling with energy-price shocks, supply disruptions, and geopolitical uncertainty radiating from the Middle East conflict.

Compounding the opportunity: Q1 2026 ETF flow data shows that investors are already rotating toward EM equities in a meaningful way, with international allocations now commanding roughly half of all equity inflows. For investors seeking exposure to EM growth with relatively lower energy-import vulnerability than Southeast Asian or Middle Eastern peers, India remains the most defensible bet.


What to Watch

  • Middle East conflict trajectory: The IMF's current projections assume a "limited conflict." Any escalation could trigger further downward revisions to EM growth forecasts, particularly for energy-importing economies in Asia and beyond.
  • Global inflation path: The IMF flagged that global inflation is expected to tick up in 2026 — central banks in major EMs will be watching closely for when to resume or pause easing cycles.
  • fDI resilience: Despite the war, the IMF still projects growth in the vast majority of economies. Watch for whether FDI flows into key EMs hold up through Q2 2026 as the geopolitical situation evolves.

This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.

Explore related topics
  • QWhat is causing global inflation to rise in 2026?
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  • QWhy are investors shifting funds to EM equities now?

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