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MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan shed more than 10 per cent in October to extend its 2018 losses to 17 per cent. A woman watches a monitor at a stock exchange in Taipei. Photo: EPA

Foreigners sold Asian equities in Oct on worries over trade, slowing growth

  • Foreigners sold a net total of US$14.54 billion in equities from Taiwan, South Korea, India, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam equities in the last month
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Foreign investors sold Asian equities heavily in October on concerns over slowing earnings, higher US interest rates and trade tensions between the United States and China.

Data from regional stock exchanges showed foreigners sold a net total of US$14.54 billion in Taiwan, South Korea, India, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam equities in the last month.

The total was the highest in at least seven years, the data showed.

The outflows were led by Taiwan, South Korea and Indian equities, with each market seeing net sales of about $4 billion or more in the last month.

“It is a run for the doors as risk sentiment was heightened on the backdrop of aggravated concerns over both trade tensions and tightening monetary conditions,” said Jingyi Pan, a Singapore-based market strategist at trading and investments provider IG.

The region’s growth worries were highlighted by the International Monetary Fund in the last month, which cut its projection for next year, citing trade wars and monetary tightening in some economies.

At the start of this month, US President Donald Trump said that he will likely make a deal with China on trade, but warned that he still may impose more tariffs on Chinese goods.

Refinitiv data showed 54 per cent of Asian companies have missed consensus earning forecasts for the third quarter so far, underscoring a lacklustre earnings performance and worries about the impact from the US-China trade war.

Filipino stock brokers react as the US market is displayed at the Philippine Stock Exchange in Taguig, south of Manila. Photo: EPA

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan shed more than 10 per cent in October to extend its 2018 losses to 17 per cent. However, the index is up 2.6 per cent so far this month.

“The sell-off had rendered Asian equities cheaper and certainly boosted the attractiveness of the region, but the outlook remains overcast with the uncertainties of US-China trade ties among others that could continue curbing the return of foreign flows,” Pan added.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Foreigners ‘run for the doors’ amid growth fears
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