(Bloomberg) Emerging markets will face stress as they cope with a stronger dollar and rising interest rates but Asia appears to be insulated, for now, according to Raghuram Rajan, former governor of the Reserve Bank of India.

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Tipping the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates another three times this year, Rajan said that developing economies are in a stronger position to absorb those hikes compared with the so-called taper tantrum in 2013. But he cautioned that accidents can happen.

“There will be still stresses for emerging markets, they will have to cope with a rising dollar and rising international interest rates and the flow back of capital flows,” Rajan said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin in Singapore on Tuesday. He cited Turkey, Argentina and Brazil as risks and also highlighted Italy as a key concern.

For Asia, narrow current account deficits, moderate inflation and resilient currencies mean the region is insulated.

“Some of them can get stressed,” he said. “At this point I would say, amongst the big ones, no clear and present danger.”

After a stellar run than began in early 2016, emerging-market assets have come under severe pressure in recent months, most notably in Argentina, where the peso has plunged 19 percent against the dollar this quarter, and in Turkey, where the lira is down 14 percent.

Economists like Andrew Tilton at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. say economic fundamentals are mostly intact, while fund managers like Patricia Ribeiro at American Century Investment Management say investors aren’t treating emerging markets as a monolithic bloc anymore.

“I can’t find one reason today that we can tie all these countries together,” said New York-based Ribeiro, whose main fund has beaten 91 percent of its peers over the past 12 months. It’s “completely the opposite of what we saw back in the 1990s” when these countries pegged their currencies at very depreciated prices to boost exports and generate dollars, she said.

In Asia, India has been one of the hardest hit economies in the emerging-market rout, with the rupee down almost 5 percent against the dollar this year. That’s adding to pressure on inflation and pushing the central bank closer to an interest-rate hike, possibly as early as Wednesday.

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article first appeared in Bloomberg.com, and is published by special arrangement.)