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     Oct 20, 2009
MARKET RAP
Asia continues to advance
By R M Cutler

MONTREAL - Asian equity markets continued to rise last week, and while the absolute amounts were not quite as much as the week previous, the patterns were nevertheless more stable and slightly less volatile overall. Although the MSCI Asia-Pacific Index closed up only 0.7% at 119.60, its ex-Japan version ended up 2.0% at 409.32.

All eyes were on the Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite (SSEC), insofar as a general opinion has grown that the speculative money has flowed there. The SSEC, having led the Asian recovery in equities and outpaced expectations by rising almost to 3,500 two and a half months ago, has therefore become in some eyes a bellwether for Asian growth and, by extension, global economic health.

The crucial level for the SSEC is 3,000, a number marking strong

  

resistance first established last summer on the way down, and then confirmed more recently as the upper bound of a shorter-term trading range. The index closed Friday at 2,977, showing some strength at that level where it closed the previous two days as well, marking a Thursday intraday high of 3,014.

The SSEC's short-term indicators are slightly on the favorable side of neutral, but technicians will be watching the 50-day (simple) moving average, which has been declining and is right now just above the level of the index's last close. However, the index is already significantly above its 50-day exponential moving average.

The SSEC was characteristically the most volatile of all Asian exchanges in the week just concluded. The Greater Chinese exchanges were indeed three of the four most volatile, but their behavior otherwise diverged. The SSEC was the third-best performer in the region, but Hong Kong's exchange was the fifth best, and Taiwan's tied only for sixth. However, it was such a good week overall, that each of these last two notched nontrivial gains.

The former's Hang Seng Index finished the week at 21,930, up 2.0%, while the latter's Taiwan Stock Exchange Composite (TSEC) finished up 1.9% to 7,691. The Hang Seng gapped up on the Thursday open but declined that day and the next, now at its current level facing a resistance first described in March 2008 and then confirmed in September of the same year. However, it is showing significant technical strength, indeed much more than the SSEC.

The TSEC may be pointing back to the trading range from 7,400 to 8,500 that it occupied from the end of November 2007 through the end of March 2008, from which it gapped up and maintained the advance through June that year before the precipitous decline from which it has been recovering since the beginning of the current year. That range, however, is terraced with supports and resistances that complicate the current interpretation. Nevertheless, the TSEC has strong short-term technical indicators.

Other than the general volatility among the Greater China exchanges, the only regional regularity this week was the overall low volatility and relatively small advances in New Zealand and Australia. The New Zealand 50 Index Gross (NZX) rose 1.4% to 3,207. Its short-term technical indicators are strong and only getting stronger. It needs to confirm its surmounting over the resistance at 3,190 from July and September 2008 and then attack the trading range that extends up to 3,320.

In Sydney, the Australia All Ordinaries Index notched a 1.9% gain on the week to close at 4,842 with generally strong short-term technical indicators, though with some of them weakening. However, it is on the verge of running into the 4,900-5,000 range to which I have pointed in recent weeks as a likely brake upon the current advance.

Singapore's Straits Times Index (STI) had a split personality this week, sharing the lower volatility of the Australasian indices just mentioned, but more closely resembling the Indian market through its stronger advance. The STI rose 2.1% on the week to 2,708 with continuing strong technical indicators but continuing to follow the pattern of the Hang Seng in that it is on the verge of running into a resistance in the higher 2,700s (kicking in around 2760-2,780) similarly inherited from the March through September 2008 chart.

With that advance the STI nearly tied with the SSEC for third best performance of the week, bringing it closer in kind to the other major South/Southeast Asian exchange in Mumbai. There, the BSE Sensex 30 jumped 4.1% to 17,323 on the week despite the exchange being closed Tuesday. It has risen so far as to encounter potential resistance, at its current level, from a local maximum from early May 2008. Still, the Sensex finished the week with still favorable short-term technical indicators.

Finally, the North Asian exchanges showed a bit of schizophrenia as the Nikkei 225 average in Tokyo was the second-best performer on the week while the KOSPI in Seoul was the worst, indeed the only major index reviewed here to finish with a loss. Despite the Japanese exchange being closed Monday, the Nikkei finished up over 2.4% to 10,258 but still within the 9,700-10,500 trading range that it has occupied for the past three months. Its short-term technical indicators are mixed, and traders will be following the 200-day (simple) moving average, currently at the level of the index itself, for a clue to its next move. They should recall that the present level is equivalent to a long-term resistance confirmed in spring-summer 2003 on the basis of chart behavior from autumn-winter of 2001-02.

To conclude, the South Korean exchange has taken a breather since hitting its short-term high a month ago at 1,719. In the week just concluded it closed at 1,640 with a loss of 0.4%. This level is in the middle of a trading range from 1,600 to 1,720 that it has occupied for the last two months: or, if one extends the lower bound of the range down to 1,550, nearly three months. The KOSPI's short-range technical indicators have decayed somewhat and it seems mired although seemingly not in danger of sinking in any quicksand.

In sum, the Asian exchanges continued their advance in the week just concluded, but short-term technical indicators aggregated across markets deteriorated somewhat overall. That said, the MSCI Asia-Pacific Index ex-Japan itself remains in good technical shape but also at a somewhat crucial juncture, as from its present level there are resistances at 414 from mid-February 2007, at 418 from mid-August 2007, at 422 from mid-March 2008, and (should it surmount those, then most significantly) at 432 from the end of July 2008. Yet I repeat the caveat mentioned in previous weeks, that it is now more necessary than ever to regard each market individually and to avoid the temptation to generalize even within a sub-region. North Asia this week is only a case in point.

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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