Investment Strategies
Credit Suisse Remains Upbeat On Japan, China, Taiwan; Turns Cool On India, Indonesia

Credit Suisse’s private banking and wealth management arm remains positive on Japanese, Taiwanese and Chinese equities while it is turned neutral on India and has an “under-perform” stance on Indonesia.
Credit Suisse’s private banking and wealth management arm remains
positive on Japanese, Taiwanese and Chinese equities while it is
turned neutral on India and has an “under-perform” stance on
Indonesia.
Overall, the Swiss bank said there is likely to be a “tactical
pullback” in Asian equities in the coming weeks, due to a
stronger dollar, certain October “event risks” and political
issues in jurisdictions such as Hong Kong. The recent
pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong – which have led a number of
banks to shut branches temporarily – have increased pressure on
local equities.
For the Asia-Pacific region as a whole, Credit Suisse has a
“neutral” asset allocation stance; it has an “outperform” view on
Asia ex-Japan.
On another, negative theme, Credit Suisse said a sharp
depreciation of the yen exchange rate has hit South Korean
exporters who have, as a result, lost a competitive advantage in
selling to the Japan market.
“We are adopting a more defensive investment strategy with a
focus on Asian reformers and dividend stocks,” the bank said in a
quarterly investment outlook note yesterday.
“Within emerging markets, we are retaining our overweight in
Emerging Asia due to its stronger growth momentum, its exposure
to the developed market recovery and its positive reform
progress. The G3-exposed North Asian markets continue to lead in
terms of earnings momentum among regional peers,” it said.
“The three markets we expect to outperform – Japan, Taiwan and
China – are leading in terms of 3-month changes in consensus
earnings per share. Earnings momentum of the ASEAN markets and
South Korea remains in negative territory, with Malaysia, South
Korea and Singapore seeing the worst earnings downgrades in the
past month,” it said.