Dedicated to Emerging Markets
Established in 2014, Ashmore Investment Saudi Arabia is licensed by the Capital Market Authority (license no. 14174-22) to engage in managing investments and operating funds, advising, arranging activities with paid-up capital of SAR 55,555,550 million. The Authorisation (License) date was 14 January 2014 and the company commenced business on 28 September 2014. The company seeks to capitalise on the global know-how and capabilities of Ashmore Group to offer a high quality, Emerging Markets focused investment proposition. Commercial Register number 1010420651. The company is directly owned and controlled by Ashmore Investment (UK) Limited.
About us
Based in London, the business was founded in 1992 as part of the Australia and New Zealand Banking Group.
ESG
Ashmore has long recognised the importance of sustainability and the impact of its investments.
Our Awards
We are proud to be recognised in the industry and to be shown recognition for our performance and success.
Our capabilities
Ashmore is a specialist Emerging Markets investment manager with over twenty years’ experience in these markets. Ashmore focuses on a number of investment themes which include External Debt, Local Currency, Corporate Debt, Equities and Alternatives. Today we continue to innovate, offering new strategies that provide an opportunity for investors to participate in Emerging Markets.
Latest Insights
Weekly investor research
De-escalatory rhetoric vs escalatory action in the Middle East
Middle East tensions remain unresolved as EM performance diverges. Korea’s exports and India’s fuel-tax cuts support Asia, while policy and political risks persist in Indonesia, Colombia, Türkiye and Brazil.
The Emerging View
The Strait of Hormuz & the Vix shock
Emerging View examines the Strait of Hormuz tail-risk, rising energy prices and supply strains, comparing today’s backdrop with past oil shocks and assessing what the Iran-US conflict could mean for emerging market assets.
Weekly investor research
Market relief as Trump signals progress in Iran negotiations
Trump gave Iran a short Hormuz ultimatum before a brief extension, as Iran hit Qatar’s Ras Laffan. Major central banks held rates with hawkish bias on energy risks, while EM policy diverged amid fuel, trade and election strains.
Weekly investor research
Strait of Hormuz disruption enters third week
Oil shock eased as Brent fell back below USD 100, but Hormuz disruption still hit supply and reserves. Brazil retail surprised positively, while Egypt saw record outflows and political strains deepened in Mexico and Brazil.
Weekly investor research
USD100 oil puts EM outperformance on hold
Oil rose above $100 as Middle East tensions escalated. US payrolls missed badly, China stayed productivity-focused, Indonesia’s outlook was cut, Argentina passed labour reforms, and Poland trimmed rates despite inflation risks.
Video
WEBINAR: The Big Rotation: Why Geopolitics, AI, and Commodities favour EM equities now
Gustavo Medeiros, Global Head of Research, and Dhiren Shah, Head of Emerging Markets Equity Strategy, discuss how today’s geopolitical landscape, advances in AI, and developments in commodities are shaping EM equity allocation.