Sao Paulo: Investors weary of the biggest US technology stocks after their unprecedented rally and recent bout of volatility are eyeing cheaper alternatives in emerging markets.

Just like their US counterparts, developing-nation tech giants including Samsung Electronics Co. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. have surged this year, but their valuation discount is near the highest in 18 months. For emerging-market bulls, the thinking goes why buy Amazon.com Inc. at 67 times the projected earnings when Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s ratio is just 29 times.

The valuation gap is bound to shrink over the next few years, making emerging markets the best bet for stock pickers who want technology shares, but are concerned that the run-up in the so-called FANG stocks — Facebook Inc., Amazon, Netflix Inc. and Google parent Alphabet Inc. — is due to reverse, according to Heinz Ruettimann, an analyst at Julius Baer Group Ltd.

“If I had to make a choice for the next three to five years, I would add emerging-market information technology stocks,” he said. “Future growth prospects are better.”

Information-technology shares in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index have surged 35 per cent this year, trouncing the 20 per cent gain for the Nasdaq 100 Stock Index. Like in the US, the rally has been led by just a few of the biggest names, with Samsung, Tencent, Alibaba, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Naspers Ltd. accounting for almost a third of the emerging market gauge’s advance this year.

But the developed-nation stock index still trade at a 36 per cent premium on a price-to-forecast-earnings basis, near the most since November 2015 and more than double the gap of just a year earlier. Ruettimann says the chasm is bound to narrow as the emerging-market companies develop their own brands, social media channels and business cycles.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. also favours technology companies from emerging markets over their US counterparts. John Marshall, a derivatives research strategist at the bank, said in a note to clients that valuations of mega-tech companies in Asia don’t look stretched and downside risks are mostly priced in. Separately, analysts at the bank on June 16 excluded US tech giants from a basket of stocks with the best risk versus reward. The MSCI Emerging Markets Information Technology Index dropped 0.5 per cent as of 12:12pm in London.

Morgan Harting, a New York-based portfolio manager at AllianceBernstein, says he has been increasing exposure to emerging-market stocks since the beginning of the year, encouraged by the outlook for earnings growth, attractive valuations and supportive technical factors. His AB SICAV I — Emerging Markets Multi-Asset Portfolio fund has returned 11 per cent this year, beating 71 per cent of peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“The market is rewarding companies in a limited set of business models that have good momentum and high profitability,” Harting said. “These have been seen as safe growth stories.”