SINGAPORE — With a little less than a quarter left of a year that’s already witnessed a trade war between the world’s two largest economies, higher oil prices and a still ongoing emerging-markets rout, what’s an investor in Southeast Asia to do?
For Morgan Stanley, DBS Group Holdings Ltd. and Nomura Holdings, Inc., the answer is simple: double down on defensive trades in Singapore and Thailand as the rest of 2018 may see more hiccups. The MSCI ASEAN Index, which tracks markets across the region, sank to its lowest level since March 2017 last week as a rout ravaged equities worldwide.
“In ASEAN, we face the same challenges with trying to pick safer markets, particularly with the Fed tightening,” Sean Gardiner, a Southeast Asian equity strategist at Morgan Stanley said in an interview. Singapore and Thailand have better balance of payments and will be able to work through that, he said.
Higher interest rates in the US have sent the dollar surging — triggering a slump in currencies from the region’s nations. The Indonesian rupiah is hovering around its weakest level since 1998, while the Philippine peso has plunged as the nation faces its fastest inflation in more than nine years.
Mr. Gardiner favors banks in Singapore, which have seen net interest margins expand with rising interest rates, and Thai energy stocks that can benefit from higher oil prices. Even after a jump this year, major oil trading houses are predicting the return of $100 crude for the first time since 2014 as OPEC and its allies struggle to compensate for US sanctions on Iran’s exports. Tensions between the US and Saudi Arabia may also ratchet up a notch after the disappearance of a journalist working for the Washington Post.
Thai shares may also get a lift from upcoming elections expected to be held in February, according to Joanne Goh, an equity strategist at DBS who has overweight ratings on Singapore and Thailand for the quarter.
Looking to 2019, Nomura’s regional strategist Chetan Seth says investors can reconsider markets such as Indonesia and the Philippines. Their benchmark indexes have fallen more than 9 percent this year, with the Philippine Stock Exchange becoming one of the world’s biggest decliners among equity gauges.
“At some point in time in the fourth quarter, all these issues get priced in,” he said by phone. You’ll want to be in markets with higher earnings growth rates, he said. — Bloomberg