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Foreign cash to emerging world to drop as tariffs threats loom - IIF

Published 12/11/2024, 08:12 AM
Updated 12/11/2024, 08:20 AM
© Reuters. People walk across the London Bridge during the morning rush hour, with the City of London's financial district in the background, in London, Britain, April 13, 2023. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls/File Photo

By Libby George

LONDON (Reuters) - Global growth will slow in 2025, and offshore investors are set to cut the cash they send to emerging markets by nearly a quarter, as promised policies from incoming U.S. President Donald Trump reverberate through global markets, a banking trade group said on Wednesday.     

The threatened tariffs, a stronger U.S. dollar and slower-than-expected interest rate cuts from the U.S. Federal Reserve are already impacting investor plans, the Institute of International Finance (IIF) said.   

"The environment for capital flows has become more challenging, tempering investor appetite for risk assets," the IIF said in its semi-annual report.     

The shift is hitting China the hardest, and emerging markets outside China are expected to pull in "robust" inflows in bonds and equities - led by resource-rich economies in the Middle East and Africa. 

Already in 2024, China marked its first outflow of foreign direct investment in decades, and total portfolio flows to the world's second-largest economy are expected to turn negative, an outflow of $25 billion, in 2025. 

"This divergence highlights the continued resilience of non-China EMs, supported by improving risk sentiment, structural shifts like supply chain diversification, and strong demand for local currency debt," the IIF said. 

The IIF projected that global growth will moderate to 2.7% in 2025, from 2.9% this year, while emerging markets are set to grow 3.8%. 

It expects capital flows to emerging markets, though, to fall to $716 billion, down from $944 billion this year, driven primarily by weaker flows to China.    

The IIF warned that its base case assumed only selective tariff implementation. If Trump's threatened 60% tariffs on China - and 10% for the rest of the world - come into force, the scenario would worsen. 

© Reuters. A woman sits on the Bund near Huangpu river as she looks on the financial district of Pudong in Shanghai, China September 27, 2024. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

"A stronger and swifter implementation of tariffs by the United States could exacerbate downside risks, amplifying disruptions to global trade and supply chains, placing 

additional strain on EM capital flows," it said. 

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