Profiting from Asia's Emerging Bond Markets
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The Economist of 3rd June started with the following eye-catching sentence: "...whereas developed countries are sending more factories and call-centres to the East, Asia long ago outsourced its capital markets to the West."
Asians' US$2.7 trn in forex reserves are parked mainly with the US Treasury. According to the Bank for International Settlements, Asian bonds in local currencies totaled US$1.98 trn at the end of 2005: Asia has 36% more of its money in US Treasuries than it has in its own domestic bond markets!
Some Asian politicians want that US$2.7 trn gradually weaned from the US Treasury and returned to Asia because -
* Stability. When foreigners get nervous, they yank their money out of Asia. So having a larger pool of local capital in Asia would mitigate this effect;
* Shifts. Local companies would reduce their dependence on loans and savers would shift their deposits to local bonds, and
* Profits. With Asia growing faster than America, Asia's Central Banks would make more money investing in Asian then in US Treasury bonds.
Money-making implications: buy into Asian and international banks and technology companies whose profits will be affected significantly once Asian bond markets get developed.
For those with a truly long-term horizon: look at the Pan Asian Bond Index Fund [PAIF], which is listed in Hong Kong. According to the Financial Times of 13th June 2006, p. 29, it invests is domestic sovereign and quasi-sovereign bonds issued by Hong Kong, China, Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. It yields about 4% and the minimum investment is US$1,000. It is billed as a "...one stop shop for gaining access to a basked of local currency Asian bonds."
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