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iShares MSCI Turkey ETF
As of May 30, 2026 at 09:10 UTC
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About iShares MSCI Turkey ETF
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Latest News
5 articlesEmerging markets are experiencing their strongest performance cycle in decades, with the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM) posting nine consecutive weekly gains—its longest winning streak since 2005. Over two months, emerging markets have outperformed U.S. stocks by 13 percentage points, driven by a rotation out of crowded U.S. tech trades, attractive valuations, weakening U.S. dollar, and increased capital flows toward commodities and cyclical sectors. This shift marks a potential structural rotation away from U.S. mega-cap dominance toward emerging market leadership.
The Supreme Court struck down Trump's tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, replacing them with a 15% global tariff under Section 122. This reshuffles winners and losers globally: China, Mexico, Canada, Brazil, and several Asian nations see tariff relief, while the EU, Japan, UK, Argentina, and Australia face higher effective tariff rates.
Global country-specific ETFs are rallying in early 2026 as investors favor markets with improving policy clarity and strong growth drivers. Norway, Turkey, South Korea, and Japan ETFs are approaching 52-week highs, driven by stable monetary policies, declining inflation, semiconductor strength, and positive fiscal outlooks respectively. The MSCI World Index has gained 2.4% year-to-date, with emerging markets particularly strong.
The Global Business Complexity Index 2025 (GBCI) report finds that the Netherlands and the UK are among the European countries with the most favorable business conditions, while Greece, France, Italy, and Turkey are the most difficult places to do business in the region. The report also identifies emerging global trends, including the need for companies to diversify their supply chains to reduce reliance on a single country.
The 2025 Global Business Complexity Index (GBCI) report shows that countries in Southern Europe and Latin America are the most complex for doing business, while Northern Europe and offshore investment hubs are the least complex. The report highlights the challenge of uncertainty due to factors like trade tensions and economic unpredictability, and suggests that businesses can offset complexities by simplifying their structures and support models.