Do Asian Stocks Climb as Won to Aussie Jump?

Source: Bloomberg

Source: Bloomberg

According to Bloomberg, Asian stocks climbed a fifth day, with the benchmark gauge trading near a five-year high, while emerging-market currencies strengthened on speculation the Federal Reserve will hold off cutting monetary stimulus until next year. Australia’s dollar jumped after inflation data.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.3 percent by 10 a.m. in Tokyo after earlier touching the highest level since June 2008. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPA) futures dropped 0.1 percent after the gauge rose in New York. South Korea’s won climbed to the strongest level since January and Malaysia’s ringgit snapped a three-day decline. The Australian dollar strengthened to hold at a 4 1/2-month high. Copper retreated 0.4 percent after gaining yesterday while silver rose a seventh day.

Barclays Plc pushed out their estimate for the start of Fed tapering to March from December after data delayed because of the U.S. government shutdown showed employers added 148,000 workers in September, below the 180,000 increase projected in a Bloomberg survey. The 16-day shutdown cut U.S. growth and cost jobs, according to an economic aide to President Barack Obama. China’s Treasury holdings fell to a six-month low in August and Australian inflation quickened more than expected last quarter.

“The key takeaway for the Fed from the September U.S. non-farm payrolls is that the U.S. economy is in no shape to withstand a reduction in monetary stimulus,” Matthew Sherwood, head of investment markets research in Sydney at Perpetual Investments, which manages about $25 billion, said in an e-mail. “Expectations of tapering delays will continue to support markets.”

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Businesses must rise up to meet the Asian Century

Businesses must rise up to meet the Asian Century

Australians are increasingly being called on to demonstrate Asia skills in the workplace. Recently, three young members of my family – all working in professional services – have been asked at short notice to join teams where high-level knowledge of Asia has been expected. In fact, it has been critical to getting the job done.

Australia faces an urgent generational challenge: we need to understand what it means to be part of Asia, and part of the Asian Century. We need to skill up for an already fundamentally different world, in which Asian countries are our primary trading partners, most important markets and increasingly significant investment partners.

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Aust shares finish lower on Asia slide

Aust shares finish lower on Asia slide

The Australian share market has finished lower, dragged down as nervous investors take their leads from falls across major Asian markets.

Despite small gains in early trade, Australian shares closed about 0.3 per cent lower as the Shanghai Composite, Japan’s Nikkei and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng indices moved into the red.

Shares in China were down 1.19 per cent when the local market closed.

CMC Markets sales trader Betty Lam said the Chinese markets had been “brought to their knees”.

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Coalition wants Northern Australia to be an entry portal for Asian business and trade

Coalition wants Northern Australia to be an entry portal for Asian business and trade

NORTHERN Australia could draw millions of foreign visitors a year to major cities built at Darwin, Cairns, Townsville and Karratha under Coalition policies released today.

And the Coalition has not ruled out relocation incentives such as income tax cuts to lure people north, even though the proposal was ridiculed when canvassed in a leaked draft in February.

A Coalition government also would look at moving Commonwealth departments such as the CSIRO and the quarantine service from southern capitals to the north.

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Asian partners: The future of Australia’s business relationship with Korea

Asian partners: The future of Australia’s business relationship with Korea

When Chung-Sok Suh arrived in Australia from South Korea in 1979 there were about 3000 Koreans living in Australia. He calls them the “first wave”. Today, the number of Korean Australians has increased to 150,000 or so, most of them based in Sydney. Importantly, many are second-generation Korean Australians, often bilingual, and a key resource in the developing relationship between the two countries.

With Korea now Australia’s fourth-largest trading partner, this new generation has an important role to play as a bridge between the two countries. It is also a trading relationship where Australia enjoys a significant surplus.

Korean brands such as Hyundai, Kia, Samsung and LG are part of everyday Australian life and investors such as POSCO are a strong presence in the Australian resources industry. Around 50 Korean companies are active in doing business with Australia, while 100 Australian companies have activities in Korea.

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Canada’s GMP Capital Eyes Growth in Asia

Canada’s GMP Capital Eyes Growth in Asia

Toronto-listed GMP Capital Inc, GMP.T +3.00% which provides advisory, underwriting and investment banking services to the natural resources sector, has been active in Australia since June 2011. Its president and chief executive Harris Fricker spoke to MoneyBeat on a recent trip to Sydney about the firm’s growth ambitions and his take on global equity capital markets. The below interview has been edited.
WSJ: What attracted GMP to Australia following your entry into London in 2006?
HF: London was a natural market for us given the bid for resources in Europe. Our success there caused us to look into the Australian market because it had identical rule of law, very common cultural traditions and very similar regulation. We thought we’d understand it very quickly. Secondly, it was being driven by the same macroeconomic factors that were driving Canada, and that was demand for commodities, stemming from the growth in Asia.
WSJ: How do you intend to grow GMP in Australia, perhaps with some acquisitions or new offices across the country?

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How China tries to iron out the boom

How China tries to iron out the boomWith several major mining projects being put on ice this week, talk has quickly turned to whether the Australian mining boom is about to go bust.

Jumping on comments by Federal Resources Minister Martin Ferguson that “the resource boom is over”, the federal opposition has blamed the government’s mining and carbon taxes for BHP’s recent decision to shelve its $30 billion Olympic Dam extension project.

However, developments in the all-important iron ore industry suggest the drivers of the boom-and possible impending bust-lie not in Australia, but China.

Recent growth in the Australian iron ore sector has been driven by the rapid industrialisation of the Chinese economy.

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