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Julius Baer Shrugs Off US Govt Shut-Down Jitters; Smiles On China, Japan
Tom Burroughes
8 October 2013
Julius Baer, which has famously declared Asia as its second “home
market”, issued a broadly bullish economic and market outlook for China in its year-end report yesterday, and
meanwhile played down fears about the budget impasse in the US. Sectors such as e-commerce, “green energy” and select parts
of the financial sector look promising as far as the Mainland is concerned, the
Swiss bank said, while it issued a cautionary note about the Hong
Kong property sector. Looming over the world economy is the focus on the current temporary
shut-down to the US Federal government after the White House and Congress
failed to agree to budget talks. The risk of a debt default by the world’s
biggest economy has resurfaced as a potential major risk. But meeting is
looking increasingly like the earliest time for a `tapering’,” the bank said.
As for Europe, it said there are a number of
signs the region has emerged from recession; select European equities are
undervalued and their businesses should profit from an improved economic
backdrop. Japan As for Japan,
the reflationary policies of the country’s government, led by Shinzo Abe, should
prove positive for the stock market, Julius Baer said. “We forecast the Japanese yen to fall to at least 105 this
year, meaning that there is further upside for the Nikkei. This is our main
investment call in Asia,” it said. Since Abe vowed at the end of last year to push for a more
expansive fiscal and monetary policy, the yen has fallen and the Japanese stock
market has risen sharply – albeit with some pullbacks. China Julius Baer said in China, the country’s banks “remain
as the main economic driver but allowing the private sector to set up banks and
potential expansion of e-banking might change the industry landscape”. “We are relatively more positive towards insurance and
brokerage sectors which should benefit from the industries liberalisation for more
product offerings. In particular, brokerage sector is the best leveraged plays to
the A-share market rebound,” it said. On a more cautious note, the bank said Hong Kong’s property
sector faces a persistent “down cycle” which could affect asset turnover; the
Hong Kong banking sector is also facing slowing mortgage demand and fee income
on macro uncertainties.