Below is something bad in Asian business but needed to monitor closely because the impact might hurt our daily life.
A friend working in a security firm told me that this subprime mortgage has reduced consumption in the U.S., dragged down stock exchange there, therefore investors who placed their money in developing market like Indonesia are rushed to sell their shares to pay credit in the U.S and put the money in safer investment like t bill.
The problem for Indonesia is we also export our goods in the U.S., so when consumption there slows down, our export will consequently also decrease. Added with the skyrocketing oil prices, this might cause Indonesian firms to increase their goods prices due to the rising operating costs affected by oil prices.
If this happens, as consumers, we will be affected as our purchasing power will fall. Correct me if my logic is wrong.
Iwan
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From BBC
Asian stocks down on credit fears
Asian stocks have slumped, as resurgent credit fears have pushed the value of the US dollar down further, harming export-oriented firms. Tokyo’s Nikkei ended 2.48% down at 15,197.09 and the broader Topix slid 2.54% to 1,456.40 – both 15-year lows. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 4.5%.
Also lower was Singapore’s Straits Times Index, which fell 2.8%.
Analysts said the trend was in response to Friday’s falls in the US, as fears regarding the credit crisis continue.
‘Scary’
“I’m afraid factors from overseas, such as sub-prime problems, are coming over to Japan,” said Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura. “We’ll closely monitor the situation,” he added.
What started as problem in the US housing market, with default rates on mortgages rising in the wake of a series of interest rates rises, later spread to other markets.
As banks begin to reveal their exposure to the sub-prime sector – which specialises in lending to riskier borrowers – there are increasing fears that greater financial losses lie ahead.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.8% on Friday after Wachovia bank said its writedowns on bad mortgage debt would total $1.1bn (£525m) for October alone.
One trader in Japan said: “Its getting to the point where everything seems scary and that its hard to trust what financial institutions are saying.”
Other fallers in Asia included China’s Shanghai Composite Index, down 2.9%. At the weekend, China’s central bank made a move to cool inflation by raising the level of deposits that commercial banks must set aside.







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www.topcreditcardsadvice.info » Asian stocks down on credit fears // November 13, 2007 at 5:32 am |
[...] mochkurniawan put an intriguing blog post on Asian stocks down on credit fears.Here’s a quick excerpt:Iwan ———— From BBC Asian stocks down on credit fears Shares in Asian exporters have been hit by the weaker US currency Asian stocks have slumped, as resurgent credit fears have pushed the value […] [...]