2022 Korean Market Outlook: The Year of the Tiger Poses both Risks and Hopes

Investing.com

Published Jan 07, 2022 06:59AM ET

Updated Jan 07, 2022 07:10AM ET

By Lee Sung Soo and Sung Ah Hwang

Investing.com - New Year 2022, the Year of the Tiger, is here. Investors have a lot of anticipation for 2022, as they have a lot of regret for the stock market in 2021. But while 2022 can be seen as the year of the tiger and a time to be aggressive, from another point of view, it looks like it will be the year that threats are lurking for investors, waiting to pounce.  

h2 Returning liquidity should boost the stock market to start 2022/h2

In the second half of 2021, the Korean stock market experienced a heavy loss, with the leading KOSPI index down 9.7%, as individual investors' liquidity decreased significantly due to domestic institutional issues: weakening sentiment, large shareholder transfer tax avoidance, passive liquidation of debt investments due to suppression of household lending, year-end dividend avoidance, and year-end fund demand.

It is expected that these challenges will be resolved in early 2022 as the natural effect of a fresh year and tax slate. The funds of large investors who evaded the large shareholder transfer tax will flow back into the stock market, and the passive liquidation of debt investment funds due to the suppression of household loans is expected to improve the burden of household loans, even for a short time, in the new year. 

At the very least, 2021’s liquidity headwinds should no longer be headwinds. As liquidity flows back into the market in 2022, there is reason to expect a small tailwind for valuations. In the end, we can predict that most of the small and mid-cap stocks that suffered the frost in the second half of last year will benefit from the liquidity inflow. 

h2 But throughout 2022, threats lurk for investors at every turn /h2

In 2022, investors can look forward to the stock market rebounding, but on the other hand, the risk factors should not be overlooked. There are many potential risks, but there are two especially serious pieces of potential bad news to watch. The first potential downside is global monetary tightening and its side effects. Already at the FOMC in December, the Fed has accelerated its tapering rate from $15 billion per month to $30 billion per month, with QE expected to end in March next year. And it seems likely that interest rate hikes will follow almost immediately after that.