Asian Markets Look Set To Continue Surging On Central Bank Easing

 | Oct 26, 2015 02:20AM ET

Asian markets look primed to rally further if the Fed and Bank of Japan (BoJ) meetings go their way this week. In the wake of the European Central Bank (ECB) and the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) announcements, markets rallied strongly. They have largely kept their gains today, and looked primed to extend them if the Fed definitively pushes out its first rate rise into 2016 and the BoJ steps up its monetary easing.

Japan

The big question in the markets at the moment is whether the BoJ will follow the ECB and the PBoC in stepping up their Quantitative and Qualitative Easing (QQE) program at their meeting on Friday 30 October.

It should be noted the BoJ has given no indication that they will expand the QQE program, and Finance Minister Taro Aso recently explicitly stated that QQE would not be expanded. Yet the case for them to do so is highly compelling. Japan’s recent run of industrial production and export data indicate that Japan is likely to see GDP contract in again in Q3, entering a technical recession. The whole credibility of Abenomics would be brought into question if the BoJ sat on their hands and did nothing as Japan went into recession and the 2% inflation target was left flapping in the wind.

In the wake of the ECB, the PBoC and the Fed likely pushing their dot plot expectations for the rate hike back, there is a strong move to monetary easing globally at the moment. This would provide maximal impact for the BoJ should they choose to ease this week.

These arguments seem to be finding traction in Japanese equity markets and the yen of late. The Nikkei 225 has been finding some solid traction since the start of October with 56% of companies on the index now trading above their 200-day moving average. This current move in the 200-day MA is interesting as it has clear similarities to those in Q4 2012 and Q3 2014, rallies which both preceded BoJ monetary stimulus.