The Best Bets in Asia

By Markets Editor Andrew Van Sickle Jun 09, 2006

Andrew Van Sickle

Share with
friends:

Comments (0) Print this article

Asia continues to look appealing for long-term investors. The region offers strong GDP growth; it has built up large trade surpluses and high foreign exchange reserves; the emergence of China has reduced its dependence on the US; and a rapidly emerging middle class, along with favourable demographics, high savings rates and a decline in interest rates over the past few years bodes well for long-term consumption growth. Meanwhile, the Asia ex-Japan region is on a 2005 PE of just 11, and companies are in much better shape than before the Asian crisis, with debt to equity ratios down to 20% from almost 50% in 1998 and return on equity high.

Asia’s healthy companies should give the market some support during what is likely to be a lacklustre second half, says Christopher Wood of CLSA. The markets may start to factor in a slowdown in China – CLSA expects narrowing profit margins amid higher commodity prices and a growing shortage of skilled labour to crimp growth sharply next year – while rate hikes in the US are another headwind.  One country that should shrug off a China slowdown is India, where the key story is a boom fuelled by a rapid expansion in consumer and corporate lending from a low base. The market is due a correction after a strong run-up, but it remains, “by a country mile, the best long-term equity story in Asia”.

Thailand is also worth a look, according to Ayaz Ibrahim, HSBC’s chief investment officer for the Asia Pacific ex Japan region. Long-delayed investments in infrastructure are now finally on the cards, which should give the region a boost

Comments (0)

Share with
friends:

Leave a comment

This will be the name displayed with your comment.

This helps us verify comments are genuine. It will not be displayed anywhere on the site and is stored confidentially.

Please keep your comment within 1,000 characters and relevant to the main topic. We encourage healthy debate, but we don't allow insults or bad language. Anything off topic or unpleasant, we'll remove. Enjoy the conversation! Thank you.

captcha To prevent spam-related comments please enter the characters shown in the 'Captcha' box to the left.

By leaving a comment you accept our terms and conditions.


FREE - MoneyWeek's daily investment emailJohn Stepek

Our free daily email, Money Morning, is an informative and enjoyable analysis of what's going on in the markets. Written by our Editor, John Stepek, and guest contributors.
Sign up FREE to Money Morning here.

>