Business World

Fed’s quantitati­ve tightening looms over Asia

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SINGAPORE — Asian emerging markets were among the biggest beneficiar­ies of the Federal Reserve’s massive balance-sheet build-up over the past decade.

So it’s tempting to conclude the Fed’s coming asset wind- down bodes ill for bonds and equities from South Korea to Taiwan.

The key gauge to watch may not be the pace at which the US central bank’s balance-sheet contracts as what happens to 10-year US Treasury yields.

If those benchmark rates remain contained below three percent, investors may still have a twinkle in their eyes for the higher returns available outside the United States.

There’s little precedent to rely on, as Fed policy makers embark again for uncharted waters, after unpreceden­ted rounds of quantitati­ve easing that began in 2008 and continued through 2014.

For now, emerging markets continue to enjoy strong capital flows. For Thailand, the influx is so strong that officials are dusting off the toolkit to potentiall­y limit gains in the baht.

“The US yield curve could steepen further, which would also impact local yield curves,” said Rajeev De Mello, who oversees about $ 11.7 billion as head of Asian fixed income in Singapore at Schroder Investment Management Ltd.

“We don’t believe this announceme­nt by itself would lead to a period of market turmoil. Investor interest in emerging markets has been strong as we would expect it to continue.”

The US 10-year yield could gravitate toward 2.75%, he said.

Emerging Asia’s bonds and equities have so far lured more than $40 billion this year as the US 10-year yield rose as high as 2.63% last month.

The last time the US 10-year yield reached three percent was in early 2014, months after then Fed Chair Ben Bernanke signaled he will stop quantitati­ve easing.

The region’s improved economic outlook, helped by a more stable Chinese economy and an accelerati­ng US economy, pushed a gauge of regional equities to its best performanc­e last quarter since September 2010. All Asian emerging-market currencies advanced this year, except for the Philippine peso. Local bonds also mostly gained, with China and India the only losers.

For Fidelity Internatio­nal and BNP Paribas Investment Partners, the removal of marketsupp­ortive measures is a positive indicator for both US and global growth.

Manufactur­ing gauges for Asia and emerging markets in general are “encouragin­g,” said Bryan Collins, a fund manager at Fidelity in Hong Kong. He said the impact from a reduction of the Fed’s balance sheet would be minimal as monetary policy remains accommodat­ive.

“For Asia, we are not that concerned,” said Hue Lu, a senior investment specialist at BNP in Hong Kong. “Following the recent December rate hike, investors barely blinked. We believe even those economies viewed as ‘fragile’ within Asia are in a better situation today as a result of reforms which have been implemente­d in recent years.” — Bloomberg

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