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     Jul 26, 2009
MARKET RAP
First in, fast out

By R M Cutler

MONTREAL - Asian stocks rose on Friday for the ninth straight day, the best winning streak since 2004 according to Bloomberg News. Consumer staples were the only sector to have a down day. Every national index typically reviewed here finished strongly up on the week and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index closed up 3.5% over last Friday at 107.0, while the ex-Japan version of the index was up 4.1% on the week to 346.8.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index was the region's largest gainer and its second-most volatile, climbing to 19,982 by Friday's close, up about 6.2% from last week, after ending near its daily highs on both Monday and Thursday. The Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite (SSEC) had another strong week, reaching 3,372 by the Friday close, rebounding from an intraday low of 3,309. This

 

closes the index's gap-up from early June 2008.

The SSEC's 4.9% jump over last Friday merited, however, only a fourth place in overall gain. It surpassed the Hang Seng's volatility to finish first in that standing this week. The third Greater China index, the Taiwan Stock Exchange Composite (TSEC), stagnated in relative terms, eighth-ranked both in volatility and in weekly gain, up only 1.8%. The TSEC tried the last four days of the week to surmount its medium- and long-term resistance at 7,000.

Every day except Monday, the TSEC registered an intraday high over that level, the highest being Friday's at 7,046, but it was unable to close above 6,985 and finished the week at 6,973. Still, strong volume throughout the week on the Taiwan exchange is a good sign should the index decide to try again next week. Most but not all technical indicators remain favorable.

The Tokyo market was closed on Monday but its Nikkei 225 benchmark index was still able to gain 5.8% on the week, twice marking the largest daily percentage gain and once more among the top three. The Nikkei closed at 9,945, fighting a long-term resistance established around 10,000 in the last quarter of 2002 and with rough going up to the mid-11,600s. Its Northeast Asian companion, the South Korean KOSPI, was up 4.2% to 1,501 on good strength and with good near-term technical indicators.

In Australasia, New Zealand continued its unaccustomed strength as the 50 Index Gross rose 5.5%, despite a down day on Monday, to close at 2,961 and set to challenge a resistance from 2005 at that level next week. The Australian All Ordinaries also followed its Asian peers with unexpected strength, although up only 2.5% on the week, closing nevertheless at 4,092 and doing so on steadily increasing volume through the week, although opening (and closing) with a gap-up on Friday.

This move signifies a definite attempt to leave behind the resistance around 4,000 inherited from 2005 that had blocked its advance in the middle of last month. If successful, then the next resistance comes in the high 4,200s. This is a medium-term resistance dating from several formations in the last quarter of 2008, and it is perhaps even more significant for the near-term future than the long-term one inherited from 2005.

Finally, the Singaporean and Indian markets also kept pace with the region's increasingly torrid advances. The former's Straits Times Index meandered slowly upwards for the first four days of the week before opening Friday with a gap-up and closing at 2,519 against a mild medium-term resistance from September 2008, which is surmounted in the low to mid-2,600s by a stronger resistance from the second quarter of 2006.

In India, Mumbai's benchmark BSE Sensex 30 continued its bull run to 15,322 in early afternoon local time Friday, after trying unsuccessfully midday on Wednesday and at the Friday open to throw a log over 15,500, where multiple coinciding short- and medium-term resistances are concentrated. As is the case for several other exchanges as noted above, short-term technical indicators are on balance favorable.

So what is really happening here? The Asian markets are now searching for optimism and finding it by picking and choosing good news from among the torrents of economic statistics released everyday (for example, selected US housing data, brokerage upgrades of some South Korean stocks).

Their somewhat surprisingly strong performance is due first of all to foreign capital flooding back into the Asian equity markets and, second, to more foreign capital following the vanguard institutional investors. Although there are admittedly fewer places to look than once was the case for significant return on investment, these investors can nevertheless withdraw their support as quickly as they have given it.

Dr Robert M Cutler (http://www.robertcutler.org), educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and The University of Michigan, has researched and taught at universities in the United States, Canada, France, Switzerland, and Russia. Now senior research fellow in the Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, Carleton University, Canada, he also consults privately in a variety of fields.

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