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     Mar 29, 2008
MARKET RAP
Bright spots defy Asia's enervation
By R M Cutler

MONTREAL - This week's patterns in Asian equity markets were far from uniform. Not even all exchanges benefited from the general relief over JP Morgan Chase's purchase of Bear Stearns. Rather, there were three basic market reactions to the event. These ranged from an immediate jump of over 3% in the Mumbai's BSE Sensex 30, the Australia All Ordinaries, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index, to more modest 1-2% rises in the Nikkei 225, the Singapore Straits Times Index, the Seoul KOSPI Composite; to no reaction or even negative reaction in the Shanghai SSE Composite and the Taiwan TSEC.

After the Sensex 30 opened on Tuesday so strongly up above its Monday close, it has not looked back. In the absence of an unexpected sudden decline on Friday 27, therefore, it is prepared


 

to finish the week stably above the 15,800 level attained last July 24, its high before the buying mania of the autumn took hold that pushed the index up over 20,800. The punch through the 15,800 resistance was led by the financials, with HDFC remaining strong all week but the State Bank of India giving up most of its Monday-Tuesday gain later in the week.

Tata Motors also helped, strongly up on reports that it would purchase Ford's Jaguar and Land Rover brands for US$2.3 billion, but headed down for the rest of the week and looks good to close below its Monday open. Still the Sensex at the time of writing looks like finishing Friday not far from its early Tuesday spike, perhaps slightly above it. Likewise the Australian market, where the finance sector also led the recovery; whereas Hong Kong has continued to rise steadily throughout the week and looks to close fully 9% above its Monday open.

Singapore, Seoul and Tokyo, which had similar responses to the JP Morgan Chase purchase of Bear Stearns, followed closely the same pattern for the remainder of the week, with less mid-week strength and a stronger finish than Hong Kong, and also with lesser amplitude, so that their closes on Friday are all 3% to 3.5% above their Monday open, with a third to a half of that gain coming overnight Monday-Tuesday. Finally, Shanghai is down 6.5% from the Monday open at mid-day Friday after being down fully 10% earlier in the day, and Taiwan closed down about 4% on the week.

If we look at year-to-date behavior, the exchanges group themselves a little differently. Taiwan is an especially strong case, in that its mid-March weakness did not even threaten to retrace to its January low. Australia and South Korea found supports at their January lows, did not fall below them, and are closing out the week significantly above those levels; Tokyo could also join these two in a group, but it finished the week so equivocally close to the support that further confirmation is needed.

Another pairing consisting of Hong Kong and Singapore has closed back above January lows after penetrating those support levels earlier this month. Finally, Mumbai and Shanghai have not succeeded in rising above their January lows after penetrating them on the downside.

Australian equities were hit by the Friday report that financial services group Opes Prime went into receivership, as this led financial stocks down for the day. By contrast, the Canadian S&P/TSX index, which has often tracked Australian markets due to the two countries' similar industrial and export structure, has been up 6% over the five business days from market-open on Thursday 20 through market-close on Thursday 27. This rise appears due the near-term resurgence of commodity prices, a snapback of banking stocks on the backs of the Bear Sterns buyout, and the telecom stock BCE.

There are no obvious criteria that permit generalizations about why these groups form the way that they do, even if most Asian exchanges have, like most world markets, responded with nearly uniform and sporadically violent movements to the successive unfolding of the American subprime crisis.

A new report by the UN Economic and Social Commission suggests that the high-technology export dependence of Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea would put them at most severe risk in the event of continued dollar weakness and an American recession. This same report suggests that India's strength in manufacturing and the service sector makes it likely to survive such a recession in the least bad shape of Asian economies.

General gains late on Friday in Asia were attributed to a report that China will permit insurance companies on the mainland to purchase local Hong Kong stocks through asset management companies. However, the tone all over Asia remains dismal due to volatility and poor sentiment in the US markets, even though the national economies have as a whole remained relatively unaffected by the credit crunch soap opera.

It does not augur well that the US exchanges finished Thursday with big losses on high volatility, driven, it seems, by nothing more than a bad earnings report by the technology leader Oracle and continued unease over the financial sector, which the apparently good-numbers completion of the Fed's first auction in its Term Securities Lending Facility was unable to overcome. This put the bellwether S&P 500 back below its one-time key support level of 1330. We shall see what surprises the weekend holds.

R M Cutler http://www.robertcutler.org is a Canadian international affairs analyst.

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(24 hours to 11:59 pm ET, Mar 27, 2008)

 
 



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