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Strategies & Market Trends : C P Pokphand (CPPKY) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Laserguy who wrote (249)4/18/2000 9:57:00 AM
From: VivB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 276
 
From reading articles this morning in the Bangkok Post online paper and the South China Morning Post, it sounds like there was an overall "meltdown" in the Asian Markets. I think CPPKY just got caught up in that.

Bangkok post (online) April 18, 2000
bangkokpost.com
Asia bourses spooked into huge sell-off

A massive sell-off swept through Asian stock markets yesterday as investors dumped shares in reaction to last week's record losses on Wall Street.

In Tokyo, the benchmark 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average fell in its fifth-largest drop, prompting officials to consider propping up the market.

The Nikkei lost 1,426.04 points, or 6.98%, to close at 19,008.64. On Friday, the average closed down 91.74 points, or 0.45%.

After the Tokyo close, ruling coalition policy chiefs agreed to recommend pumping up to one trillion yen ($9.7 billion) in public funds into the stock market if it continues to plunge.

Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori said the government was "carefully monitoring" the market.

In Hong Kong, the blue-chip Hang Seng Index fell 1,380.39 points, or 8.6%, closing at 14,762.37. It was the index's worst point decline since Oct 28, 1997, when it shed 1,438.31 points.

"I had no idea this thing could be so bad," said Mark Mobius, an emerging markets fund manager in Hong Kong with Templeton Franklin Investment Services (Asia) Ltd.

South Korean shares also plunged, with the main index suffering its worst-ever fall as investors went on a selling spree.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index closed at 707.72 points, down 93.17, or 11.6%. It was the market's biggest single-day decline both in terms of points and percentage.

On Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average plunged 617.78 points, or 5.7%, to 10,305.77-by far its biggest one-day point drop ever.

The Nasdaq composite index, home to the technology stocks whose popularity has evaporated, also suffered its worst point drop ever-down 355.49, or almost 10%, to 3,321.29.

Singapore's benchmark Straits Times Index fell 190.37 points, or 8.69%, to close at 1,999.39. It was the STI's biggest fall since Oct 20, 1987, when the index fell 266 points, or 25.3%, to 787.53.

Bucking the trend was Taiwan, where prices closed higher for the first time in six sessions amid government-fund buying and bargain-hunting after Saturday's 5.4% plunge.



To: Laserguy who wrote (249)4/18/2000 10:01:00 AM
From: VivB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 276
 
Here's the South China Post's version of yesterday's sell off:
scmp.com

Tuesday, April 18, 2000

Equity slump a reality check
DAVID SAUNDERS, SUZANNE HARRISON and CATHY HOLCOMBE

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yesterday's region-wide slump in equity markets is likely to herald a more realistic appraisal of technology stocks among Asian investors, according to investment professionals.
They expected investor attention to switch from previously hot "dotcom" issues to quality technology firms with real earnings potential.

Economists, meanwhile, said the slump did not threaten to derail Asia's economic recovery, although it would slow growth.

Most in the marketplace took yesterday's heavy falls in their stride, saying there was no panic among investors as Asian markets, led by technology stocks, took a battering.

However, fund managers said the fall had caused investors to take a more discerning view of technology companies, particularly Internet-related firms with questionable earnings potential.

"I think in general for Asian investors this has been a lesson: The Internet is not everything," Invesco Asia fund manager Martin Lau said.

Instead, investors would gravitate more towards hardware and semiconductor manufacturers, he said.

Reacting to record points falls on Wall Street on Friday, the Hang Seng Index suffered its biggest decline since October 28, 1997, closing 1,380.39 points, or 8.55 per cent, lower at 14,762.37.

In Tokyo, the Nikkei-225 Index recorded its fifth-largest drop, ending 1,426.04 points, or 6.97 per cent, down at 19,008.64, while in Seoul, the Korea Composite Index closed at 707.72 points, down 93.17, or 11.63 per cent - its biggest single-day decline both in terms of points and percentage.

Investec Guinness Flight chief investment officer Robert Conlon said he felt relatively immune to the slump, despite being a buyer of "new economy" plays.

"We don't think [yesterday's] correction has changed that fact," he said. "But when we say we're buyers in the new economy, we own no dotcom companies. What we've been looking at is the way that traditional businesses are evolving to take advantage of the tech sector . . . companies like Li & Fung."

Director of Barclays International Funds (Asia) Roger Pyrke said the correction prompted investors to look at technology stocks more realistically.

"They are saying: 'If we are going to be in the new economy, let's be in those that actually do something,' " said Mr Pyrke, who also believed it was too early to go back into the market following yesterday's falls.

Others said they anticipated a more conservative investment strategy, especially if US markets continued to fall.

Already some investment houses have increased their cash holdings in recent weeks in anticipation of a market correction. HSBC deputy treasurer Mike Powell saw investors switching into regional bonds in the type of portfolio re-balancing associated with longer-term investment.

"Usually credit spreads blow out when the equity markets fall like this so there was some switching into corporate and sovereign debt. It's a real portfolio adjustment rather than a switch into cash," he said.

Head of Asian investment at Axa Investment Managers (Hong Kong) Barbara Shaw said Friday's sell-off on the US technology-dominated Nasdaq Stock Market had accelerated a move back into non-tech related stocks.

Ms Shaw said telecommunications companies could also be casualties of the anti-technology sentiment.

"This is where I see risk as well as opportunity. If Asia comes down further, these companies will present good value," she said.

Economists said they expected the slump in stock markets would slow growth in Asia, but it would not send economies into reverse.

"My view is that this will not derail the overall trend of recovery in Asia, but it could dampen the strength," said head of North Asia economics at Merrill Lynch, Guonan Ma, adding the wealth effect of recent gains on the stock market may disappear.

Most economists have said they expect a slowdown in growth in the second half of this year, in line with a manufactured slowdown in the United States because of tighter monetary policy.

ING Barings North Asian economist Eddie Wong said Hong Kong's export sector could suffer if the US market correction turned into a crash, depressing economic growth and consumer spending.

By noon yesterday, US stocks had clawed back some of Friday's losses, with the Nasdaq 78.72 points higher at 3,400.01 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 71.05 points at 10,376.82.