The Appeal of Ex-China Emerging Market Strategies

Emerging market investing has long been dominated by China’s outsized role. The country once accounted for roughly 30%-40% of many EM indexes. However, growing geopolitical tensions, regulatory uncertainties, and economic slowdowns have led many advisors and investors to reconsider their China exposure. This has sparked increased interest in “ex-China” emerging market strategies as a way to capture growth potential while mitigating China-specific risks.

And they aren’t alone. According to Morningstar Direct, European-listed EM equity ETFs took in €8.1 billion in net inflows in the first seven months of 2025, already ahead of 2024’s full-year total and on pace to break the record set in 2023. A notable share of those flows are targeting EM strategies that strip out China entirely.

Geopolitical & Regulatory Risks

Over the past few years, U.S./China relations have become increasingly strained, with trade disputes, technology restrictions, and concerns about Taiwan’s geopolitical status fueling investor caution. China’s domestic regulatory clampdowns, particularly in sectors like technology and education, have further increased market volatility. According to a 2025 report by Morningstar, such changes in China have contributed to notable fluctuations in its equity markets, leading investors to seek diversification outside of China’s influence.

Additionally, China’s economic growth is slowing due to demographic headwinds, debt concerns, and structural shifts toward a consumption-driven economy. The IMF’s World Economic Outlook in 2024 projects China’s GDP growth to moderate to around 4%-5% over the next few years, compared to double-digit growth in many other emerging economies. This slowdown reduces the growth premium that once made China the centerpiece of EM allocations.

What’s Left When You Remove China?

Removing China from the EM mix unveils a diverse landscape with compelling opportunities such as India, Brazil, Mexico, Southeast Asia (Indonesia and Vietnam), and South Korea, and Taiwan.

Morgan Stanley’s 2024 outlook highlights India as the fastest-growing major economy within EM, driven by consumption and technology sectors.