Emerging Asia Indices Breath A Sigh Of Relief

 | Jan 23, 2017 04:31AM ET

Developed Asia and Emerging Asia diverged in performance today following the Presidential inauguration last Friday.

Developed and Emerging are clumsy terms to use these days in this part of the world. China, Singapore and Taiwan could hardly be described as “emerging” economies today. Although one could argue India is. Are they any more or less developed than their “developed” counterparts in Australia and Japan for example? I guess it depends on your point of view. A more accurate description might be those economies with an open capital account and a floating currency vs. those whom are not and may be in Mr Trump’s ”

A more accurate description might be those economies with an open capital account and a floating currency vs. those whom are not and may be in Mr Trump’s “currency manipulator” sights. To the 2nd group, you could well and truly add South Korea. The KOSPI is not represented here today because South Korea is so restricted even Superman couldn’t get it listed on their online trading platform. I would hazard a guess to saySouth Korea would be no.2 in Mr Trump’s manipulating list behind China.

Looking at the performance of APAC’s equity indices today it fair to say that the ones in the first group suffered and the ones in the second traded a “breath a sigh of relief premium.” The is to say that with the long USD trade unwinding post-Friday and Mr Trump saying nothing about them this weekend, no news was good news.

Looking at Australia and Japan, both the AUD and the JPY have rallied against the USD today, in JPY’s case, staunchly. Both had been early beneficiaries of the Trump reflation story, and with open capital accounts, AUD’s and JPY’s could freely be sold for USD’s. This has meant a lot of the Trump-call had already been built into them leading into last Friday, being high beta to US performance since the election.

ASX

Down 0.9% as a stronger AUD and nervousness about the ramifications of a trade war between China and the USA weighed on the index. China is by far and away Australia’s largest trading partner and thus a default beta to future China performance. There was off course profit taking involved as well.