Asia firms' sentiment slips on geo-political tensions -
Thomson Reuters/INSEAD
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[September 20, 2017]
By Suvashree Choudhury
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Business confidence
among Asian companies fell for the first time in three quarters in
July-September as escalating geo-political tensions outweighed an
improved performance by most economies in the region, a Thomson Reuters/INSEAD
survey showed.
The Thomson Reuters/INSEAD Asian Business Sentiment Index, representing
the six-month outlook of 86 firms, slipped to 69 for the September
quarter from 74 three months before. The decline was the first drop from
a previous quarter since the final quarter of 2016. A reading above 50
indicates a positive outlook.
While China, India and South Korea led the fall in sentiment in the
third quarter, reflecting regional tensions and sluggish growth, most
Southeast Asian economies and Australia put in a stable performance,
limiting the downside in the overall index.
"Companies expressed concerns this quarter about trade and diplomatic
tensions not only in the region but also in the world," said Antonio
Fatas, a Singapore-based economics professor at global business school
INSEAD.
"This brought the index down, in a reflection of cautiousness because of
the potential risks that could derail the current state of the economy,"
he said.
South Korea's sub-index fell the steepest among its peers in the survey,
dropping to 50 from 75 in the previous quarter. The country has been
rattled by North Korea's series of nuclear tests and missile launches,
although a war on the Korean peninsula is seen as unlikely.
Trade friction with China has also risen over Seoul's deployment of a
U.S. anti-missile system to counter the North Korean threat, as Beijing
fears the system's radar can penetrate its territory.
China, upon which much of Asia depends for trade, saw its subindex fall
to 63, its lowest since the last quarter of 2015. Its gross domestic
product rose 6.9 percent in the second quarter but growth is expected to
slow on tighter debt regulations.
India fell to 63 from 82 in April-June, a level last seen in the second
quarter of 2013. Growth at Asia's third-largest economy slowed to its
lowest in three years to 5.7 percent in April-June and is expected to
stay muted on a lack of private investment.
Australia's sub-index inched up to 69 from 67 in the June quarter, and
Singapore's rose to 64 from 62. Sentiment climbed the most in Indonesia
in the September quarter, with a 17 point jump in its sub-index to 100,
its highest since the second quarter of 2013, though the survey pool was
small with only three firms participating.
The sub-index for three other economies - Malaysia, Philippines and
Taiwan - remained unchanged over the previous quarter.
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A man looks at his mobile at a shopping complex in Tokyo's Shibuya
district, Japan September 15, 2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai/File Photo
GRAPHIC: Business sentiment index: http://tmsnrt.rs/2mnCKQD
STATUS QUO AHEAD?
The pace at which global central banks tighten their accommodative monetary
policies is set to be one of the biggest factors for Asia business sentiment in
the quarters ahead.
"More than geo-political tensions, policy normalization by global central banks
and firming up of oil prices are a bigger issue for Asian economies," said
Radhika Rao, chief economist at DBS in Singapore.
While Canada has already hiked rates twice in recent months and the Bank of
England warned of rate hike possibilities, all eyes are now on the U.S. Federal
Reserve's decision on Wednesday where it is likely to take another step toward
policy normalization.
But a major shift in business sentiment either way is unlikely.
"The technology-oriented and commodity exporting countries will do well in Asia
but overall I expect a status quo in sentiments going ahead, barring a reversal
in oil prices,” DBS's Rao said.
The survey showed that while the proportion of respondents with a positive bias
fell to 47, the lowest level since the December quarter of 2016, companies which
were neutral rose to 45, the highest level since the March quarter of 2016.
Sectors including retail, metals, real estate and technology showed bullish
trends while others like autos, construction, healthcare and transport were more
subdued.
Corporates such as survey respondent Kossan Rubber Industries of Malaysia cited
exchange rates and interest rates as the key risks going ahead. While
maintaining that it was cautiously positive, given increasing global demand for
gloves, Kossan was worried about "escalating production cost due to higher raw
material cost, energy, labor and volatile exchange rate".
GRAPHIC: Biggest perceived risks: http://tmsnrt.rs/2gU9mL9
Note: Companies surveyed can change from quarter to quarter.
PDF of survey: http://tmsnrt.rs/2xMV1Mq
(Reporting by Suvashree Choudhury; Additional reporting by Tommy Wilkes in New
Delhi; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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