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     Jul 11, 2009
MARKET RAP
Endurance test

By R M Cutler

MONTREAL - Asian equity markets this week deepened the pause in recent advance that they began last week even while Shanghai continued to be the strongest performer for the fourth week running on the basis of unexpectedly strong economic statistics. Taiwan was the second strongest for the second successive week running.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 3.1% to 100.6 from 102.8 while the ex-Japan index was off 2.2% to 316.0 from 323.0. India and Japan accounted for much of the loss, although Hong Kong also had a nontrivial down week. Bloomberg News reports that Credit Suisse expects the current dip to last for as long as three

 

months, regards it as a buying opportunity and is beginning to recommend riskier assets.

That advice is based upon the optimistic assumption that the third quarter will see the end of the global recession, implicitly tracing a "V" rather than a "W" or an "L". JP Morgan Chase shares the view that low interest rates and worldwide government fiscal stimuli will lead to a rebound in the global economy. George Soros is reported to believe that China will lead the pack, with reference to recovery from the global financial crisis.

The Chinese equity market has certainly led the pack over the past month, with the Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite (SSEC) showing unexpected strength above the 3,000 level this week closing at 3,140, up about 1.6% since last Friday’s close. This places it almost exactly at the resistance interval from April 2008 to which I pointed last week, still approaching from the downside.

The SSEC has already tried once, on Monday and Tuesday this week, to penetrate that level. A series of short- and medium-term technical indicators did turn less favorable on Wednesday. The SSEC has also popped, to the upside, out of the uptrend channel it has been following since March. It would be reasonable for the index now to fall a bit so as to test the ascending-tops line of that uptrend and decide whether or not it has become a bit overextended.

If the SSEC succeeds in continuing its advance, then that would mean that the uptrend should be marked as beginning last November rather than in March of this year. In that event, the SSEC would sooner rather than later run into the minimum of its gap-down from 3,313 to 3,215 early June 2008. It is worth remembering that the top 20% of that range corresponds to an interval within the still unfilled gap-up from April 2008.

Taiwan was up slightly less than 1.6% and closing at 6,770, apparently preparing to mount a challenge to the 7,000 level where its advance was blocked a month ago. Technical indicators are in fact mildly positive in the short term. The third Greater China exchange, Hong Kong, was not so lucky, coming in with the week's third-worst performance on the week's second-highest volatility. The Hang Seng Index was down about 2.5% on the week at 17,708, with overall slightly negative technicals in the short term. Crucially, the index is now at the bottom of its trading range since the end of June, balanced also on two separate short-term supports from May. Next week's performance will tell us whether the index stays in the trading range; if not, then the just-mentioned supports will turn into resistances.

Despite all the interest in the Greater Chinese markets, the headline story in Asian equities this week was the 5.8% drop on Monday in India's BSE Sensex 30, leading to a decline that by midday Friday local time had reached 7.5%. This has taken the index down to the region around 13,800, within striking distance of the upper bound, at 13,479, of its mid-May gap-up from 12,218 following Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's victory in the recent elections for the Lok Sabha (lower house of parliament).

The narrative provided by the press is that business circles were disappointed in the budget deficit that the government foresees as necessary to reestablish the economic growth rates seen earlier in the decade before the ongoing global recession. There is undoubtedly some truth to that on the psychological level, but the event was just a trigger for behavior that was looking for an excuse to manifest.

The Sensex had been stalled in a range around 15,000 for the previous five weeks and had to consolidate its phenomenal gains over the past four months. This was foreseeable, as was its current halt at the top of its 13,300-13,700 support range (see Indian stock surge false guide to economy, Asia Times Online, May 22, 2009). Indeed, while the Sensex may still hem and haw over the short term, a series of short- and medium-term technical indicators have all turned negative this week. The broader-based Nifty has confirmed some but not all of those indicators; it has contradicted none of them.

The last major story in Asian markets this week was the weakness in Japan, where technical indicators have been negative since the last week of June and where this week the Nikkei 225 closed off 5.4% 9,287. After a two-month attempt to leave behind the medium-term trading range of which the upper bound was first traced nine months ago, the Nikkei has now slipped back inside that range after failing to confirm its first successful test, three weeks ago, of the top of the range as a support from the upside. The next supports are at 9,240, and 8,850, then followed by a more diffuse interval between 8,550 and 8,600.

Beyond these stories this week, there is not much else to say. India's major companion exchange in the South/Southeast Asian theater, Singapore, closed the period up 0.2% at the 2,304 level, having tested on Wednesday for the second time successfully its short-term support at 2,241 but with technical indicators still generally negative.

Likewise, Japan's counterpart in Northeast Asia, South Korea, was not much changed, up 0.6% on the week to 1,429, although with its technical indicators in better shape than Singapore's, indeed consistently if mildly positive, if not strongly enough so to make inevitable its immediate conquest of the resistance through which it has been trying to break in fact since the beginning of May. This would be because that resistance has been well established not only in the medium term, since September-October last year, but also in the long-term, through the first half of 2006.

Australia and New Zealand performed in the middle of the pack this week, meaning that they were each down between 0.8% and 0.9% on average volatility and behaving in such a manner as to require no emendation of comment from recent weeks. In short, the general Asia-wide breather in the equity markets looks set to continue next week; even if a couple of exchanges seem still to have some energy left, their endurance will soon be challenged.

Dr Robert M Cutler (http://www.robertcutler.org), educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and The University of Michigan, has researched and taught at universities in the United States, Canada, France, Switzerland, and Russia. Now senior research fellow in the Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, Carleton University, Canada, he also consults privately in a variety of fields.

R M Cutler (http://www.robertcutler.org) is a Canadian international affairs specialist.

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