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13 May 2026

Asian Bonds—No Longer Just an EM Trade

By Robert O. Abad

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One of the more interesting shifts in fixed-income today is that investors are increasingly viewing Asia-Pacific bond markets not simply as a traditional emerging market (EM) allocation or as an alternative to developed market (DM) fixed-income, but as a distinct asset class and region in their own right. The Asia-Pacific area represents a heterogeneous mix of markets, underpinned by growing economic weight and declining beta to other global markets. This perspective reflects a broader reassessment taking place across global fixed-income. Today, Asia offers relatively stable inflation, improving local market depth, attractive real yields and a growing universe of high-quality corporate issuers. By contrast, many US and European bond investors over the past several years have had to navigate inflation shocks, political uncertainty and fiscal deterioration.

Another important shift is that long-duration DM debt has become far more volatile than investors had grown accustomed to during the post-Global Financial Crisis era. Moreover, correlations between bonds and equities have periodically broken down, sovereign issuance continues to climb and uncertainty about inflation remains elevated. Against that backdrop, Asian bonds quietly delivered strong relative performance through 2025 and into early 2026, helped by lower inflation, gradual central bank easing, tighter spreads and periods of US dollar weakness.

The ongoing war in Iran and disruption surrounding the Strait of Hormuz have only reinforced how important these distinctions have become. Asia remains heavily dependent on imported energy, with the bulk of Gulf oil exports ultimately flowing toward Asian economies. In theory, that should leave the region highly vulnerable to oil supply shocks and imported inflation. Yet despite the surge in energy prices and disruptions in shipping flows, much of Asia has so far weathered the shock better than many investors initially feared. Market volatility has been driven far more by moves in global rates and oil prices than by fears of widespread credit deterioration across Asia. That distinction matters because it highlights how parts of the region’s bond market are increasingly behaving more like mature credit markets than the higher-beta EM segments investors often associate with geopolitical stress.

The macro backdrop across much of Asia also compares favorably with several other EM regions. Inflation in many Asian economies has either normalized back toward central bank targets or remained well below the levels experienced in DM economies following the post-pandemic inflation surge. That’s allowed policymakers in countries such as India, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines to maintain more accommodative policy settings without triggering the same kind of currency instability investors often associate with EM. That said, the war in the Middle East and resulting oil shock have complicated the outlook for some Asian central banks, particularly those more exposed to imported energy inflation, underscoring that the region is hardly immune to prolonged supply disruptions.

For these reasons, Asian bond markets are often viewed as lower beta relative to Latin America or frontier market debt, but yields still look attractive relative to many DM alternatives. Local currency sovereign yields in India, Indonesia and the Philippines continue to trade above comparable US Treasury yields while also offering relatively attractive real yields. Meanwhile, several Asian currencies entered 2026 from far less stretched valuation levels than many DM currencies after years of US dollar strength.

Spread volatility on USD-denominated Asian bonds has also generally remained lower than in several commodity-linked or politically fragile EM regions. That partly reflects stronger external balances and the fact that many Asian economies spent decades building domestic capital markets following the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis. The result is an increasingly attractive middle ground for investors. Higher-yielding EM regions can provide substantial carry, but they also come with a commensurate amount of political, inflation and currency risk. Asia offers a combination of carry, macro stability and market depth that is becoming harder to ignore.

The appeal of Asian fixed-income is also no longer limited to sovereign debt. Asian corporate bonds have become an important diversifying source of income and credit exposure. Over the past decade, the region’s corporate bond market has deepened considerably, supported by growing domestic institutional demand from pension systems, insurers and reserve managers. Unlike some EM corporate markets that remain heavily dependent on foreign capital flows, parts of Asia’s credit market benefit from more stable local investor participation during periods of volatility.

The composition of Asian corporate credit has evolved significantly as well. Investors often associate Asian credit with China property stress from prior years, but investment-grade (IG) corporates, quasi-sovereign issuers, infrastructure companies, utilities, transportation firms, technology-related issuers and export-oriented businesses now represent a much larger share of the market. In fact, one underappreciated aspect of Asia’s corporate bond universe is its growing exposure to long-term structural themes such as supply chain diversification, digital infrastructure, electrification and intra-Asian trade growth. At the same time, geopolitical fragmentation and energy market volatility are creating increasingly wide divergences across sectors and countries, making security selection within Asian credit more important than in prior cycles.

While Asia remains dependent on imported energy, the direct impact of higher oil prices on much of the region’s IG corporate universe appears more limited than many investors initially assumed. Asian IG issuers have largely shown relatively limited direct sensitivity to higher oil prices, helping explain why credit markets remained comparatively orderly despite the geopolitical shock.

From a spread perspective, Asian USD-denominated IG corporates often continue to trade at wider spreads than comparable US IG bonds despite generally strong balance sheets and historically lower default rates. For global investors searching for incremental spread without moving significantly down the quality spectrum, that relative value proposition has become increasingly attractive. Local currency corporate markets are also becoming more important as issuers and investors gradually diversify away from sole dependence on US dollar funding markets.

Many Asian economies spent decades building domestic savings pools, reserve buffers and local bond market infrastructure precisely to reduce vulnerability to external shocks and sudden stops in foreign capital flows. As a result, regional bond markets today are generally deeper and more resilient than during prior EM stress episodes.

Of course, none of this means Asian bonds are risk-free. China’s uneven recovery, trade disruptions, geopolitical tensions and currency volatility still matter. Valuations in parts of Asia have also tightened after strong performance. Still, compared with many more-established DM regions that are now grappling with fiscal deterioration and volatile rate dynamics, Asia increasingly appears less like a tactical allocation and more like a structural pillar of global fixed-income portfolios.

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