Asia Equities: A Quarter of Dispersion

Asia Equities: A Quarter of Dispersion

Our Chief Asia and Emerging Market Equity Strategist reviews an up-and-down first quarter for markets across the region, and gives an update on which sectors investors should be eyeing.


----- Transcript -----


Welcome to the Thoughts on the Market. I’m Jonathan Garner, Morgan Stanley’s Chief Asia and Emerging Market Equity Strategist. Along with my colleagues bringing you a variety of perspectives, today I'll be talking about our key investment views in Asia. It's Tuesday, Mar 19th at 9 am in Singapore.

It's been quite a first quarter in Asian equities with a wide degree of dispersion in market returns. At one end of the spectrum Japan’s Nikkei index is up 16 percent. At the other end, despite a recent rally, the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong is down 2 percent for the year. Meanwhile, the AI thematic has helped Taiwan into second place regionally, with a 10 percent gain; but Korea has risen by a lot less.

Our highest conviction views remains that we’re in the midst of multi-year secular bull markets in Japan and India, whilst at the same time China is in a secular bear market. So, let’s lay out the building blocks of those theses.

Firstly, Japan’s Return on Equity Journey. We think that markets – like stocks – reward improvement in profitability or ROE. The drivers of the ROE improvement are numerous but include domestic reflation, a weaker Yen, a productive capex cycle and improved capital management by Japan’s leading firms. And these together have led to improving net income margins in two-thirds of industries versus a decade ago.

We forecast robust EPS growth of around 9 percent in 2024, with similar growth in 2025. Now that’s assuming our foreign exchange strategists’ USD/JPY forecast of 140 for the fourth quarter of this year is accurate. This week the BOJ – the Bank of Japan – is considering whether to exit its Negative Interest Rate Policy and abolish or flex yield curve control. If it does so, that will be a sign – along with recent strong wage gains – that Japan has definitively exited deflation.

Secondly, India’s Decade. Multipolar world trends are supporting foreign direct investment (FDI) flows and portfolio flows to India, whilst positive demographics from a rapidly growing working age population are also supporting the equity market. India is holding national elections in May, and we will be watching the policy framework thereafter. But our base case is little change; success that India has achieved in macro-stability is underpinning a strong capex and profits outlook.

Finally, China’s Deflationary Challenge. China continues to battle what we’ve termed its 3D challenge of Debt (now standing at 300 per cent of GDP), Demographics and Deflation. And profitability has fallen steadily in recent years – so going in the opposite direction from Japan; approximately halving since the middle of the last decade, whilst earnings have missed for nine straight quarters. We think more forceful countercyclical measures are needed to boost demand in China given incipient balance sheet recession due to headwinds from property and local government austerity.

Finally, to summarize some of our sector and style views. We still like Korea and Taiwan’s semiconductors, into an expected 2024 recovery in traditional product areas such as smart phone, as well as the new theme of AI related demand. We are positive on Financials in India, Indonesia and Singapore; Industrials in India and Mexico; and Consumer Discretionary in India. On the quant and style side, we’re neutral on value versus growth as we expect the path to lower yields to be bumpy – as inflation risk remains. And we have recently recommended investors to reduce momentum exposure for risk management purposes given the strong outperformance year to date.

Thanks for listening. Subscribe to Thoughts on the Market on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen – and leave us a review. We’d love to hear from you.

Episoder(1515)

Andrew Sheets: Markets Ponder a Trillion-Dollar Question

Andrew Sheets: Markets Ponder a Trillion-Dollar Question

A downward adjustment in some high-flying U.S. tech stocks has put investors on edge this month, but an impasse on fiscal stimulus negotiations may be the real issue to watch.

11 Sep 20203min

Special Episode: Why Vaccine Discovery is Just the Beginning

Special Episode: Why Vaccine Discovery is Just the Beginning

As COVID-19 vaccine development continues in phase three studies, the logistics of FDA approvals, production and the complex hurdles of distribution are taking shape.

10 Sep 20209min

Michael Zezas: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Michael Zezas: The Waiting is the Hardest Part

Could a possible delay in U.S. election night results mean volatility as markets price various outcomes for policies that impact sectors?

9 Sep 20202min

Mike Wilson: Putting the Market Correction in Context

Mike Wilson: Putting the Market Correction in Context

Although the current market correction is not wholly surprising given the outsized rally in August, what was the ultimate trigger… and what's next?

8 Sep 20204min

Andrew Sheets: Are Markets Really “Disconnected”?

Andrew Sheets: Are Markets Really “Disconnected”?

How to explain the steady, almost mechanical rise in markets despite often weak economic data? It may come down to expectations and trend lines.

3 Sep 20202min

Mike Wilson: The Age of Fiscal Policy Dominance?

Mike Wilson: The Age of Fiscal Policy Dominance?

Although consensus sees long-term interest rates staying low, could a potential $2 trillion fiscal stimulus mean rates will rise more (and faster) than markets currently expect?

31 Aug 20203min

Michael Zezas: How Much Aid Do State/Local Governments Need?

Michael Zezas: How Much Aid Do State/Local Governments Need?

Just how big would a state and local U.S. stimulus package need to be to support a V-shaped recovery and avoid credit downgrades?

26 Aug 20202min

Robin Xing: China’s Next Phase - Recovery, Reshoring, Retaining

Robin Xing: China’s Next Phase - Recovery, Reshoring, Retaining

China’s recovery could be progressing better than markets expected as consumers spend more money onshore and the nation’s export engine gains market share.

25 Aug 20204min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
dine-penger-pengeradet
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
finansredaksjonen
rss-vass-knepp-show
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
pengepodden-2
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
okonomiamatorene
utbytte
rss-markedspuls-2
lederpodden
rss-sunn-okonomi
rss-fri-kontantstrom
rss-impressions-2
aksjepodden