Investment Strategies
Tariffs Prompt BNP Paribas To Favour Domestically-Focused Asian Stocks

When export revenues are hit by tariffs, it's understandable that investors focus on firms that rely on domestic demand instead. The French banking group explains its reasoning.
BNP Paribas Exane, the cash equities business of BNP Paribas, says it is
sticking with its preference in the near term for Asia’s
domestically-focused economies, mindful that US tariffs hurt
export revenues.
“As such, we continue to prefer China and India, and their higher
quality domestically-orientated sub-industries, over the
Northeast Asian markets (Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan),”
William Bratton BNP Paribas Securities (Asia) Limited, said in a
note yesterday.
Private banks and wealth managers are wrestling with how to treat
the Asia-Pacific region given that some of its economies have
been hit – or could be hit – by tariffs enacted by the US Trump
administration. While these tariffs are being challenged in the
US courts for being an unwarranted use of presidential power, the
possibility of such measures is arguably as serious a risk as the
material fact of them. Several other wealth managers have
explained how they view this issue for asset allocation, for
example here
and
here.
Bratton said panellists and attendees at the BNP Paribas’s Global
Markets APAC 2025 Conference in Hong Kong discussed such topics
yesterday.
“At the global scale, for example, there was much discussion on
the relative strength of US global influence under the Trump
administration and whether the global economy was moving towards
a bipolar construct centred around the US and China, and their
blocs, or a more multi-lateral, complex, and fluid, web of
opportunistic relationships,” Bratton said. “A common theme was
the idea that although the US would retain its global primacy in
the medium-term, it was now a less dependable partner to Asia and
Europe.”
“As such, it was suggested that countries in both regions needed
to become more self-sufficient and/or develop new partnerships.
China was seen as a potential beneficiary of this realignment
given its industrial, economic, and financial influence,
especially with the 'global south’.”
“Nevertheless, it was argued that the advanced (`western’)
economies would remain more resilient than often perceived,
especially if they made the necessary structural changes. This
was seen as a particular priority for Europe, although, in turn,
it was noted that the European Union would need substantive
governance changes to improve its ability to respond to its
current challenges,” Bratton continued.
An important factor is the apparent “rebasing” of the China-India
relationship after long-standing tensions between the countries,
he said.
“To us, geopolitics are ultimately defined by economic
geographies and from that perspective, we see Asia evolving
towards a clear core/periphery structure with China evermore
entrenched at the region’s core, both economically and
politically. Simultaneously, we see the various non-Asian
influences in the region (especially the US) becoming
progressively weaker given the compounding influence of geography
and economic gravity.
“This, we argue, will have long-term implications for the
region’s financial markets. On the one hand, we believe 'western’
capital will play a diminishing role within the region as local
(or 'Asian’) capital becomes more important. This is already a
well-established theme within China and India, with all the
subsequent challenges for foreign investors. But, on the other
hand, we also believe that China’s increasingly entrenched status
at the core of the Asian economic system will result in it
offering disproportionately more attractive investment
opportunities than available elsewhere in the region,” Bratton
added.