Frontier markets

A frontier market is a term for a type of developing country's market economy which is more developed than a least developed country's, but too small, risky, or illiquid to be generally classified as an emerging market economy. The term is an economic term which was coined by International Finance Corporation’s Farida Khambata in 1992. The term is commonly used[1] to describe the equity markets of the smaller and less accessible, but still "investable" countries of the developing world. The frontier, or pre-emerging equity markets are typically pursued by investors seeking high, long-run return potential as well as low correlations with other markets.[2] Some frontier market countries were emerging markets in the past, but have regressed to frontier status.[3][4]

  1. ^ Muller, Chris (March 24, 2023). "How to Start Investing: A Complete Guide for Beginners - Doughroller". www.doughroller.net.
  2. ^ Salamat, Rishaad. "Investing in Cambodia, Haiti, Bangladesh, Laos". Bloomberg. Retrieved 21 May 2012.
  3. ^ MarketWatch, Polya Lesova. "MSCI will downgrade Argentina to frontier market". MarketWatch.
  4. ^ "MSCI reclassifies stocks in emerging, frontier market indexes | Reuters". Reuters. 7 November 2013.

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