The four best-performing Asian markets have been Taiwan, Pakistan, Thailand and Sri Lanka, posting modest gains of between 2 percent and 8 per cent in US dollar terms. Is this the Asian "decoupling'' that global investors had so fondly hoped for? Weren't the larger and faster-growing economies of China and India supposed to shield investors from the mortgage- and credit-related financial crisis in the US? And look where the Chinese and Indian markets are at the start of the last day's trading for the first quarter: among the 10 worst-performing equity benchmarks globally so far this year, together with Vietnam, that other Asian miracle-in-the-making. With declines of about 16 percent year-to-date in the Hang Seng Index and the Kospi Index, Hong Kong and South Korea are also near the bottom of the Asian heap. Several things went wrong with the larger, more liquid and more-foreign-owned markets of the region. First, hedge funds sold stocks that were the easiest to sell as their investors, spooked by volatility and gripped by pessimism, pulled money out. As Mark Matthews, a Merrill Lynch & Co. equity strategist in Hong Kong, says, ''It is easy to kick out Asia and come back to it later.'' Winners and losers That has been particularly a problem for economies such as China, India, Vietnam and Singapore where domestic demand "" either for investments or for consumption "" is strong. Local forces, too, have played a part. In China, large blocks of currently non-tradable shares held by the government and strategic investors are coming out of lockup restrictions. Investors are nervous about a stock glut, which could be as large as $428 billion. So much for the losers. The winners' story is much more remarkable, especially when you consider that the quarter began with a heightening of political risk in two out of these four markets and "" at least at the time "" a far-from-certain process of reduction of the same risk in the two remaining ones. Assassination, civil war The final week of 2007 saw the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan and the escalation of hostilities between the army and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in Sri Lanka. That led to the Sri Lankan government withdrawing from a 2002 cease-fire agreement in January. The politics in both these countries remain precarious. A showdown between Pakistan's newly elected democratic politicians and their sworn enemy, President Pervez Musharraf, could produce outcomes that are impossible to predict right now. Musharraf, it must be remembered, no longer controls the army, the most important source of political power in Pakistan. Nor is there much hope of a quick reconciliation between the Sinhalese and the Tamil populations in Sri Lanka. On the mend Until the final week of December, Ma Ying-jeou, who recently won the election for Taiwan's presidency, still ran a risk of being disqualified from contesting the poll. The High Court cleared him of corruption charges only on Dec. 28. The new president of Taiwan is expected to end the previous administration's frosty stance toward China, allowing the Taiwanese economy to benefit from the growth and dynamism of the mainland. (The author is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) |