2005 (1235)
2006 (492)
2007 (191)
2008 (735)
2009 (1102)
2010 (315)
2011 (256)
2012 (203)
Here are my thoughts: Imagine if there is a global balance sheet, then who is the biggest beneficiary of the massive monetary/quantitative easing instigated by DM central banks to combat the “credit crunch”?
It will be the Asian and EM assets, given the currency or monetary policy links, and thus the related reflation story. Same important point is that given health sovereign balance sheet, EM countries has no structural domestic constraints to boost the internal growth, while the collapse in funding costs will serve to boost local asset price reflation.
Thus, since October 2008, MSCI AxJ and the MSCI Emerging Markets have risen by 56% and 57% respectively. In contrast, MSCI World and SP500 have risen by only 16% and 8% over the same period.
W:
Last night U.S. stock market retreated by 1.2%, but more eye-catching news is that $14 billion U.S. Treasury auction pushed 30-year treasury yield up 16bp to 4.25%. 10 year treasury yield also rose 11bp to 3.29%, all new high since Lehman’s bankruptcy. Now the difference between 30 year mortgage rate (4.79%, May 1) and 30 year treasury yield (4.25%) is only 54bp, probably the lowest spread in history. In my view, the rally in treasury has already started to jeopardize the property market’s ‘stabilization’ and the stock market rally.
I am always of the view that this round of ‘economic recovery’ and stock market rally was driven by extremely low interest rate: (1)
With regard to the stock market, after the 2 months’ sharp rally and continued signs of economic recovery, people tend to think economy is healthy again. But rising
I am of the view that sharp rising