Insight

Asia’s structural tailwinds come into sharper view

Asia-Pacific has been the region most severely impacted by the energy supply shock since the Middle East conflict broke out. Nevertheless, equity markets have outperformed both the US and Europe so far in 2026, reflecting the region’s centrality to global technology and innovation.

Authors

    Portfolio Manager
    Portfolio Manager
    Portfolio Manager
    Client Portfolio Manager

Summary

  1. Asia-Pacific equities have transcended the 2026 energy supply shock so far
  2. AI earnings strength and attractive valuations form a powerful combination
  3. Middle East trade disruption means volatility is likely to continue

MSCI Asia-Pacific, up 13.2% in the year to 30 April1, has recently outpaced MSCI USA (5.5%) and MSCI Europe (4.4%), with many portfolios remaining heavily concentrated in a narrow set of US companies. A combination of more attractive relative valuations, broadening economic momentum beyond the US, and shifting supply chains is creating a window for investors to reassess their regional allocations. The recent conflict in the Middle East triggered a broad risk-off move and a reset in valuations, but from a medium-term perspective that correction became an entry point, rather than undermining the fundamental Asia-Pacific equities story.

AI theme powering Taiwan, Korea and Japan

At the heart of the opportunity is Asia’s role in the artificial intelligence and digital infrastructure build out. While headlines typically focus on US chip designers and hyperscalers, much of the essential ‘picks and shovels’ infrastructure underpinning the AI era is produced in Asia. As new data centers proliferate globally, demand is rising for advanced cooling systems, networking equipment, precision components and power management solutions. Many of the critical suppliers in these niches, particularly across memory and semiconductor supply chains, are based in Japan, Korea and Taiwan, providing exposure to AI driven capex without relying solely on the most obvious semiconductor names. Energy is becoming another defining bottleneck for AI, and Asian power equipment and energy supply companies stand to benefit as utilities and corporates upgrade grids and generation capacity to meet soaring electricity needs.

Valuations remain at a steep discount to the US

Valuations provide a second important pillar for the Asia-Pacific investment thesis (see Figure 1). With US markets having already enjoyed a long re rating, the scope for further multiple expansion appears limited, leaving future returns more dependent on earnings growth alone. By contrast, Asia still offers the potential for both earnings growth and some catch up re rating. Economic activity is picking up from a low base, and earnings revisions across Asia-Pacific are turning positive, supported by corporate reforms, strengthening domestic demand, and later cycle benefits from AI, infrastructure build outs and higher defense spending. Dividend yields also tend to be more attractive in Asia, giving investors an additional component of total return.

Asia-Pacific Equities D EUR

performance ytd (30-4)
15.29%
Performance 3y (30-4)
19.97%
morningstar (30-4)
4 / 5
SFDR (30-4)
Article 8
Dividend Paying (30-4)
No
View the fund
Past performance is no guarantee of future results. The value of the investments may fluctuate. Annualized (for periods longer than one year). Performances are net of fees and based on transaction prices.

Figure 1: The valuation gap persists

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. The value of your investments may fluctuate.

Source: Robeco, MSCI, 30 April 2026.

The long standing valuation gap between Asia and the US also reflects differences in market structure and perceptions of shareholder friendliness. US companies have been rewarded for higher leverage, aggressive buybacks and consistently high returns on equity. Historically, some Asian markets have lagged on corporate governance and shareholder return practices, dampening valuations despite solid business fundamentals. However, this picture is changing. Governance reforms in Japan and the ‘value up’ initiative in Korea are driving better capital allocation, higher payout ratios and more disciplined balance sheets, with buybacks and dividends becoming more entrenched. As these improvements broaden across the region and fundamentals continue to strengthen, there is clear scope for the valuation discount to narrow over time.

Get the latest insights

Subscribe to our newsletter for investment updates and expert analysis.

Don’t miss out

Asia represents a diverse set of opportunities

Beyond Japan, Taiwan and Korea, structural growth drivers differ markedly, with distinct sources of alpha beyond the AI theme currently dominating global markets. India and Southeast Asia benefit from favorable demographics, rising incomes and rapid urbanization that are powering a multi year upshift in domestic consumption and services demand. Financials, consumer companies and infrastructure linked sectors stand out as beneficiaries as banking penetration deepens, credit access broadens and governments invest in transport, energy and digital networks. India is also undergoing a significant infrastructure CapEx cycle, with large scale power transmission expansion, electrification and grid modernization underway to support industrialization and fast growing data center demand. These trends anchor India’s long duration growth potential and create a broad opportunity set across banks, utilities, industrials and technology hardware.

In ASEAN, structural themes such as financial inclusion, urbanization and the rise of digital infrastructure are prominent. Banks in Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam are benefiting from still low credit penetration and the formalization of financial systems. Domestic real estate and consumption driven businesses tap into rising incomes, housing demand and ongoing urban development. At the same time, the region is emerging as a manufacturing and digital infrastructure hub, attracting foreign direct investment as global companies diversify supply chains away from single country concentration.

China plus one is still happening

Despite falling out of focus given the Iran war and massive AI build-out, supply chain reconfiguration is itself still a major tailwind for Asia-Pacific. It is driving FDI into markets such as Indonesia, Vietnam,2 Malaysia and India, where companies are expanding manufacturing capacity, logistics networks and enabling infrastructure. The resulting capex cycle spans industrial automation, semiconductor equipment, transport and port infrastructure, and energy and power projects. These investments are generating multiplier effects across local economies and broadening the opportunity set for investors.

As the largest equity market in the region, China remains a polarizing component of the regional story, but the approach there also illustrates the importance of active management. After being viewed by many since Covid as uninvestable, MSCI China delivered strong performance in 2025 as sentiment stabilized and investors recognized a more selective, valuation driven opportunity set. Pro growth policy measures reduced perceived tariff risk, while resilient large cap technology earnings and evidence of domestic AI capability have all contributed to a more nuanced picture.

Active strategies have an edge

In such a diverse and heterogeneous region, we believe active management is advantageous. Asia-Pacific encompasses economies at very different stages of development, with varied growth rates, income levels, industry structures, cultures and currencies, creating a complex landscape rich in potential alpha. As Figure 2 shows, performance dispersion between countries is high and performance leadership changes fast, giving an edge to active investment strategies for the region as a whole.

Figure 2: Performance dispersion across countries is significant

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. The value of your investments may fluctuate.

Source: MSCI China, MSCI India, MSCI Japan, MSCI Korea, MSCI Taiwan, MSCI Australia, and MSCI AC ASEAN factsheets. Calendar year total returns in USD.

Asia-Pacific well positioned but Middle East trade crunch remains a key risk

Asia Pacific equities continue to demonstrate resilience, underpinned by strong AI-driven earnings and attractive valuations, even amid geopolitical uncertainty and rising energy prices. However, the recent rally, largely concentrated in a narrow group of AI beneficiaries, highlights increasing concentration risk and a narrowing margin for error as higher oil prices may begin to weigh on broader demand and earnings.

While we remain constructive given compelling valuations, improving earnings momentum and the region’s diverse structural growth drivers, the current environment calls for greater discipline. Investors should remain vigilant, closely monitoring earnings delivery, managing concentration risk, and actively diversifying sources of alpha to navigate a more complex and uneven market backdrop. Given its strategic pre-eminence in key industries and the region’s structural tailwinds we believe allocation to Asia-Pacific, with its blend of developed and emerging markets, should be a core element of a global portfolio for long-term equity investors. In the shorter term, after the neutral result of the May Trump-Xi summit, any confirmed resolution to the US-Iran conflict could be the next catalyst for Asia-Pacific equities.

Footnotes

1 MSCI AC Asia Pacific Index, US Index, Europe Index factsheets to 30 April in USD.
2China’s Pivot to Vietnam Blows Hole in Trump’s Made-in-USA Plan – Bloomberg – 31 March 2026

Let's keep the conversation going

Keep track of fast-moving events in sustainable and quantitative investing, trends and credits with our newsletters.

Don’t miss out

Robeco aims to enable its clients to achieve their financial and sustainability goals by providing superior investment returns and solutions.

Important information This disclaimer applies to any documents and the verbal or written comments of any person in presentations or webinars on this website and taken together is referred to herein as the “Information”. The services to which the Information relate are NOT FOR RETAIL CLIENTS - The information contained in the Website is solely intended for professional investors, defined as investors which (1) qualify as professional clients within the meaning of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), (2) have requested to be treated as professional clients within the meaning of the MiFID or (3) are authorized to receive such information under any other applicable laws and must not be relied or acted upon by any other persons. This Information does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any financial product, and may not be relied upon in connection with the purchase or sale of any financial product. You are cautioned against using this Information as the basis for making a decision to purchase any financial product. To the extent that you rely on the Information in connection with any investment decision, you do so at your own risk. The Information does not purport to be complete on any topic addressed. The Information may contain data or analysis prepared by third parties and no representation or warranty about the accuracy of such data or analysis is provided.
In all cases where historical performance is presented, please note that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results and should not be relied upon as the basis for making an investment decision. Investors may not get back the amount originally invested. Neither Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. nor any of its affiliates guarantees the performance or the future returns of any investments. If the currency in which the past performance is displayed differs from the currency of the country in which you reside, then you should be aware that due to exchange rate fluctuations the performance shown may increase or decrease if converted into your local currency. Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. (“Robeco”) expressly prohibits any redistribution of the Information without the prior written consent of Robeco. The Information is not intended for distribution to, or use by, any person or entity in any jurisdiction or country where such distribution or use is contrary to law, rule or regulation. Certain information contained in the Information includes calculations or figures that have been prepared internally and have not been audited or verified by a third party. Use of different methods for preparing, calculating or presenting information may lead to different results. Robeco Institutional Asset Management UK Limited (“RIAM UK”) is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. RIAM UK, 30 Fenchurch Street, Part Level 8, London EC3M 3BD (FCA Reference No:1007814). The company is registered in England and Wales under Ref No. 15362605.

In all cases where historical performance is presented, please note that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results and should not be relied upon as the basis for making an investment decision. Investors may not get back the amount originally invested. Neither Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. nor any of its affiliates guarantees the performance or the future returns of any investments. If the currency in which the past performance is displayed differs from the currency of the country in which you reside, then you should be aware that due to exchange rate fluctuations the performance shown may increase or decrease if converted into your local currency. Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. (“Robeco”) expressly prohibits any redistribution of the Information without the prior written consent of Robeco. The Information is not intended for distribution to, or use by, any person or entity in any jurisdiction or country where such distribution or use is contrary to law, rule or regulation. Certain information contained in the Information includes calculations or figures that have been prepared internally and have not been audited or verified by a third party. Use of different methods for preparing, calculating or presenting information may lead to different results. Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. is authorised as a manager of UCITS and AIFs by the Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets and subject to limited regulation in the UK by the Financial Conduct Authority. Details about the extent of our regulation by the Financial Conduct Authority are available from us on request.