Probing the Carry Trade
Asia's downward spiral continued Monday amid fresh debate in the region over the cause of the recent selloff. It's a classic chicken-and-egg debate: Did the rising cost of the yen carry trade set off the panic-selling in China, or did the Chinese meltdown set off the unwinding of the yen carry trade?
Which came first is important, market-watchers say, because finding the catalyst may be the answer to stemming the red-digit bloodbath affecting world markets. In what some are seeing as a new "Asian contagion," investors in Asian ETFs fared the worst of all last week. The iShares FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index (FXI Quote) plunged nearly 10%, while the iShares Singapore Index (EWS Quote), the iShares Malaysia Index (EWM Quote) and the iShares MSCI Emerging Market Index (EEM Quote) -- which gained 22% last year -- all suffered similarly. (In recent trading Monday, the ETFs were down between 0.9% and 5.7%.) Many hoped that the region would reverse last week's losses. But overnight Monday, the Nikkei 225 lost 3.34%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng plummeted 4% and the Shanghai Composite Index lost 1.6%. But it was the Shanghai market's B-share index that set off another round of panic selling, after it plunged 6.9%. So-called B-shares are denominated in foreign currencies and are thus more relevant to the carry-trade conversation than shares on the mainland, which trade only in the local currency.- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,344.91 | 1,096.40 | 2,151.22 | 32.34 |
Oil *
76.75
|
|
DOWN
119.49
|
DOWN
14.23
|
DOWN
24.83
|
DOWN
0.45
|
10 Yr
3.23%
SPDR Gold
115.66
|
|
-1.14%
|
-1.28%
|
-1.14%
|
-1.37%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |














