Asian Stocks May Ride Out Tough 2005 in Style
By Andy Mukherjee
Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) -- For investors fretting over the many risks to the world economy next year, here's a pleasant prospect: Asian stocks may ride out a turbulent 2005 in style.
For Asian equities to put up a good show in the face of a declining dollar, cooling Chinese demand and still-high oil prices, the region's central banks need only lift the lid off local money supply, giving households and companies more spending power.
Make no mistake, a declining dollar and slackening
``We like domestically focused stocks in Asia,'' says T.J. Bond, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Merrill Lynch & Co., who says he favors banks and telecommunications shares because ``the Asian consumer in Japan, in China and the rest of the region will rise to the challenge in 2005.''
The key to stoking Asia's consumption and investment demand lies with the region's central banks, which have for the past two years resisted appreciation in their currencies by lining up their reserves with dollars brought in by exporters, investors and speculators. Then, to make sure the money they released into the banking system in order to purchase the dollars wasn't inflationary, they sold bonds to ``sterilize'' the cash. The net effect was that local demand in
Credit Growth
In a recent report, Sailesh Jha, Dong Tao and other Asia economists at Credit Suisse First Boston cite the example of
Yet, thanks to aggressive sterilization, the central bank's net domestic assets, as a ratio of GDP, shrank 14 percentage points in the same period. As a result, the ratio of monetary base to GDP, a measure of new money created by the central bank, expanded a measly 1.4 percentage points.
``The anemic pickup in the monetary base has been one of the key reasons why credit growth has yet to explode in Singapore, in spite of an expected 8.4 percent GDP growth in 2004,'' the CSFB researchers say.
Sterilization Costs
Why should it be any different in 2005? For one, Asian central banks will be able to sell more local-currency bonds only by paying higher yields -- much higher than what they earn on their foreign assets. Second, a weakening dollar will drive more overseas capital into
``Overburdened by accelerating capital flows to their economies and domestic investors' tolerance for buying domestic government securities diminishing, Asian central banks may reduce their pace of sterilization in 2005, '' says the CSFB report. More money sloshing about in the Asian banking system in 2005 will help fuel consumer spending on property, cars, consumer durables and financial assets.
From an Asian central bank perspective, it would be good to have the American consumer buying the region's exports of cars and computers. Still, it won't be the end of the world if the overspent
Asian Consumer
``Even if Asia is set to decelerate,'' say Sebastien Barbe and Claire Dissaux, economists at Calyon, the investment banking arm of France's Credit Agricole SA, ``it should continue to do much better than Europe. We see non-Japan Asia's GDP increasing by 6.7 percent year-on-year in 2005, compared with only 1.7 percent for Europe.''
Most Asian nations can afford to expand their monetary base, except
Asian equities may be the dominant investment theme in 2005. ``We're big believers in Asia,'' says Emiel Van den Heiligenberg, who oversees $97 billion in assets at Fortis Investments in
That will surely be a pleasant prospect for investors in a volatile 2005.
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