Asian equities receive meagre inflows in October amid recession worries
Asian equities saw meagre inflows in October after massive selling in the previous month, and analysts expect fears of a global recession and a stronger U.S. dollar to weigh on near-term money flows into the region.
Data from stock exchanges in Taiwan, India, the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia, and South Korea showed foreigners bought equities worth a net $53 million last month. In September, they had sold shares worth a net $8.8 billion.
Also read: Fusion Micro Finance IPO opens for public subscription, GMP rises; should you subscribe?
“Headwinds to Asia intensified owing to enhanced U.S. curbs on Chinese companies sourcing U.S. technology and continued doubts about China’s economic recovery,” said Manishi Raychaudhuri, head of APAC equity research at BNP Paribas.
South Korea received the highest inflow of $2.1 billion, while Indonesia and Thailand got $729 million and $196 million, respectively. Taiwanese equities witnessed a huge outflow of $2.9 billion.
Also read: Rupee likely to remain steady ahead of US Fed meet outcome; USDINR pair to trade sideways in this range
Destocking in the information and communication technology sector is massive, hitting many Taiwanese companies in the semiconductor sector, said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at Natixis.
Vietnam, the Philippines, and India also faced outflows last month.
“Flows into Asia, especially North Asia, remain challenging in the face of DM (Developed market) recession concerns and a strengthening USD,” said BNP’s Raychaudhuri.
“Both drivers are likely to sustain in the near term.”