Asia: breaking new new ground

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Transcription:

Economics Asia: breaking new new ground DBS Group Research 11 May 1 Asia s exports continue to advance at an 8% pace. It s not the % pace of yesteryear but it s respectable given the sluggish global economy When the going is tough, every little bit counts. Asia is growing its exports by entering new markets and stealing market share in both old and new markets Latin America and Emerging Europe have become as important to Asia s exporters as Japan Half of Asia s export growth in Latin America has come from stealing market share, not organic / local growth In Emerging Europe, the contribution is an even greater % A couple of weeks back, we asked how it was that Asia continued to grow its exports at a seemingly decent pace when the global economy was so flat ( Asia: breaking new old ground, Apr). Measured with a basket of dollars, euros and yen so as to remove the effects of large currency swings that have characterized markets for the past year Asia s exports have trended northward at an 8% pace since early-11. How so? Who s buying? Looking at Asia s key markets the, Europe, Japan and Asia itself the answer was pretty straightforward. The biggest driver of Asia s export growth wasn t the, or Japan or Europe. It was Asia itself. That shouldn t surprise. Asia s GDP continues to grow at a.% as it has for the past four years. As we regularly point out,.% growth on a base of $1trn creates a Germany every 3. years, right here in Asia. Not for nothing is Asia now driving most of its own GDP and export growth. Asia 1 exports Jan8=1, sa, 3mma, avg D, EUR and Y terms 17 1 1 1 13 1 11 1 9 8 Lehman crash Asia's V-shaped recovery 8% growth path since Jan 11 7 7 8 9 1 11 1 13 1 1 David Carbon () 878-98 davidcarbon@dbs.com 1

But, we noted, it s not just about Asia. Exports to Japan have continued to grow, albeit slowly, in tri-currency terms. Exports to developed Europe stopped falling in early-13 and have run northward for the past two years. That U-turn has helped Asia a lot. And exports to the have expanded at a %-% per year pace in tri-currency terms. How was that possible, we asked, when import growth was barely half that? By (further) penetrating the market: stealing market share. Some % of Asia s growth owed to greater penetration only % came from a bigger pie. import market shares % share of total imports by country, 3mma 3 Asia-1 3 1 1 EU 99 1 3 7 9 11 13 1 Latin America and Emerging Europe With the global economy in such mediocre shape, every scrap of export growth matters. Besides the usual markets the, developed Europe and Japan where is Asia breaking new ground, if at all? The answer is Latin America and Emerging Europe. Asia s exports there have grown by 13x-1x since 1999, 3 times faster than those markets themselves have grown, and. times faster than Asia s total exports have grown [1]. In short, Asia and Emerging Europe and Latin America are becoming increasingly important to each LatAm imports D bn/mth, sa, 3mma Emerging Europe imports D bn/mth, sa, 3mma 3 3 8 7 Asia-1 1 1 Asia-1 3 1 99 1 3 7 9 11 13 1 99 1 3 7 9 11 13 1

other. From Asia s perspective, by the end of 1, exports to LatAm and Emerging Europe accounted for % of all Asia-1 exports, making those two markets as important to the region as Japan (chart below). Asia now exports as much to Latin America and Emerging Europe as it does to Japan Asia-1: export destinations percent share of Asia-1 exports destined for various regions, 1 3 3 1 1 13 1 Asia-1 Developed Europe Japan LatAm Emerg Europe Stealing market shares again As with the, Asia isn t just sending more exports to Latin America and Emerging Europe, it s penetrating those markets, stealing market share. Asia has tripled its LatAm market share since 1999, lifting it to 18% from %. In Emerging Europe, Asia has doubled its share and now owns some 1% of the EE market (charts below left and right). Plainly, stealing market share has raised Asia s export revenues by far more than organic growth alone would have done. Over the past four years, Asia s export revenues from Latin America have grown by about $bn / month (saar, see table next page). Only half of that would have been pocketed had Asia not grown its market share. LatAm import market % share of total LA imports by country 3 3 Asia-1 1 1 99 1 3 7 9 11 13 1 Emerging Europe import market % share of total EE imports by country 1 Asia-1 1 8 99 1 3 7 9 11 13 1 3

Asia-1: export growth to Latin America and Emerging Europe January 11-January 1 Half of Asia s growth in Latin America has come from stealing market share, not indigenous / local growth. In Emerging Europe, the ratio is an even greater :38 Emerging Europe* Latin America ^ Change in total imports ($bn/mth, saar).3 17. Asia-1 local mkt share Dec 1 (%) 1. 1.8 Asia export growth assuming constant.3 7. market share ($ bn/mth, saar) Actual Asia X growth ($bn/mth, saar) 1.. % contribution from ethnic growth 38.1. % contribution from Asia's market penetration 1.9 9. * EE-7: Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Turkey ^ LA-1: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Columbia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela In Emerging Europe, the contribution is even greater. Asia s exports there expanded by $17bn/mth (saar) between January 11 and January 1. Sixty-two percent of that came from eating some else s lunch, not from growth in the overall market. The economic facts of life At the end of the day, constant upgrading of skills and productivity is what gives any country higher incomes. It allows economies to produce more for less and become more competitive in the process. Penetrating global markets is one way to measure that increased competitiveness. Asia continues to break new ground in old markets such as the and new ground in new markets such as Latin America and Emerging Europe. Asia is slowing down, as all developing economies must do. But lifting competitiveness and penetrating global markets prevents all countries from slowing more than they should. It s all the more important when the global economy runs at such a pedestrian pace. Nomenclature: [1] In this report, country regions adhere to the following terminology: Asia-1: CH, HK, TW, KR, TH, MY, SG, ID, PH, IN; LatAm1: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Columbia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela; Emerging Europe: Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Turkey Sources: Except where noted, data for all charts and tables are from CEIC Data, Bloomberg and DBS Group Research (forecasts and transformations).

GDP & inflation forecasts GDP growth, % YoY CPI inflation, % YoY 1 13 1 1f 1f 1 13 1 1f 1f.3.....1 1. 1. 1. 1.7 Japan 1.8 1.. 1.3 1....7 1..8 Eurozone -.7 -..9.9 1.. 1.3.. 1.1 Indonesia....1...... Malaysia..7..9. 1.7.1 3.1 3. 3. Philippines.8 7..1.3. 3..9. 3. 3.8 Singapore 3...9 3. 3... 1.. 1.3 Thailand..9.7 3..3 3.. 1.9.8.8 Vietnam..... 9.3..1 1.9 3. China 7.7 7.7 7. 7..8... 1.8. Hong Kong 1.7.9.3.8 3..1.3. 3.7 3. Taiwan.1. 3.7 3. 3. 1.9.8 1. -. 1. Korea.3 3. 3.3 3. 3.. 1.3 1.3.8.1 India*.1.9 7. 7.8 8.3 7. 9....8 * India data & forecasts refer to fiscal years beginning April; prior to 13. Source: CEIC and DBS Research Policy & exchange rate forecasts Policy interest rates, eop Exchange rates, eop current Q1 3Q1 Q1 1Q1 current Q1 3Q1 Q1 1Q1.....7 Japan.1.1.1.1.1 119.9 11 1 13 1 Eurozone..... 1.117 1.11 1.8 1. 1. Indonesia 7. 7. 7. 7. 7. 13,1 13, 13, 13, 1387 Malaysia 3. 3. 3. 3. 3. 3. 3. 3. 3.9 3.73 Philippines........3.. Singapore n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.38 1. Thailand 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 33. 33. 33. 33.3 33. Vietnam^..... 1,33 1, 1, 1, 1, China*.1.1.1.1.1.1....8 Hong Kong n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 7.7 7.7 7.77 7.77 7.78 Taiwan 1.88 1.88 1.88 1.88. 3.7 31.8 3. 3. 3. Korea 1.7 1. 1. 1. 1.7 191 1118 1133 117 111 India 7. 7. 7. 7. 7. 3.8 3....7 ^ prime rate; * 1-yr lending rate Market prices Policy rate 1Y bond yield FX Equities Current Current 1wk chg Current 1wk chg Index Current 1wk chg (%) (%) (bps) (%) (%)..1 3 9. -. S&P,11. Japan.1. 119.9. Topix 1,88-1.9 Eurozone..3 1 1.117. Eurostoxx 3,7 1. Indonesia 7. 8.1 3 1313-1.3 JCI,18 1.9 Malaysia 3. 3.9 3. -.8 KLCI 1,88-1.9 Philippines.... PCI 7,73. Singapore Ccy policy.1 1 1.33 -.3 FSSTI 3, -1. Thailand 1..78 33. -.7 SET 1,11-1. China.1.1 -.1 S'hai Comp, -.3 Hong Kong Ccy policy 1.7 1 7.7. HSI 7,77 -. Taiwan 1.88 1.9 3.7 -.3 TWSE 9,9-1.3 Korea 1.7. 191-1.3 Kospi,8 -.7 India 7. 7.93 7 3.9 -.9 Sensex 7,1.3 Source: Bloomberg

Recent Research CNH: Q expansion heralds next stage of May 1 capital account liberalization Greece: the clock is ticking MY: limited options May1 9 Apr1 India and Indonesia: taking stock 9 Apr 1 : over the hump (and sliding fast) 8 Apr 1 Asia bonds: floating on a yield cushion 7 Apr 1 Asia: breaking new old ground Apr 1 : portfolio rebalancing underway 1 Apr 1 : Fed funds and such 1 Apr 1 CN: more inclusive urbanization policies 13 Apr 1 TH: further cuts unlikely 13 Apr 1 Asia cyclical dashboard: an eerie calm 8 Apr 1 IN: policy to be data dependent 7 Apr 1 SGD: Making room for volatility Apr 1 CN: Recalibrating monetary policy Apr 1 ID: Tax targets are too optimistic 1 Apr 1 CNH: The growing influence of yuan 31 Mar 1 settlement in forex reserves CN: Fiscal reforms to accelerate 7 Mar 1 IN: Assessing RBI priorities Mar 1 KR: Wither export competitiveness? 19 Mar 1 CNH: A freer China 17 Mar 1 Qtrly: Economics-Markets-Strategy Q1 1 Mar 1 IN budget: Growth trumps fiscal goals Mar 1 ID: No shift in BI s tight policy bias 7 Feb 1 SG budget: Shaping Singapore s future Feb 1 India budget: A balancing act 17 Feb 1 : Substantial deflation here, now 1 Feb 1 SG: Jubilee budget 1 1 Feb 1 D Rates: Market vs Fed 1 Feb 1 CN: The need for a better unemployment gauge Feb 1 IN: Facing ECB QE and a strong dollar 3 Jan 1 Asia: Are currencies too strong? 8 Jan 1 ID: Delivery is key 8 Jan 1 SG: Old problem, new approaches 7 Jan 1 Global crude: low for how long? 19 Jan 1 IN: Falling oil prices good or bad? 19 Jan 1 IN: RBI curts rates, more to come 1 Jan 1 CN: Restarting SOE reforms 13 Jan 1 : mixed impact of low oil prices 1 JUan 1 T yields: Downward distortions 1 Jan 1 Asia: vulnerability dashboard 19 Dec 1 Qtrly: Economics-Markets-Strategy 1Q1 1 Dec 1 CNH: To break fresh ground in 1 17 Nov 1 CNH: Conversion capi finally lifted 1 Nov 1 : The impact of QQE 7 Nov 1 CN: Significant easing remains unlikely Nov 1 Asia s export race: who s winning? 3 Oct 1 ID: Watching external debt 3 Oct 1 MY: Assessing the GST impact 9 Oct 1 Disclaimer: The information herein is published by DBS Bank Ltd (the Company ). It is based on information obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but the Company does not make any representation or warranty, express or implied, as to its accuracy, completeness, timeliness or correctness for any particular purpose. Opinions expressed are subject to change without notice. Any recommendation contained herein does not have regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and the particular needs of any specific addressee. The information herein is published for the information of addressees only and is not to be taken in substitution for the exercise of judgement by addressees, who should obtain separate legal or financial advice. The Company, or any of its related companies or any individuals connected with the group accepts no liability for any direct, special, indirect, consequential, incidental damages or any other loss or damages of any kind arising from any use of the information herein (including any error, omission or misstatement herein, negligent or otherwise) or further communication thereof, even if the Company or any other person has been advised of the possibility thereof. The information herein is not to be construed as an offer or a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any securities, futures, options or other financial instruments or to provide any investment advice or services. The Company and its associates, their directors, officers and/or employees may have positions or other interests in, and may effect transactions in securities mentioned herein and may also perform or seek to perform broking, investment banking and other banking or financial services for these companies. The information herein is not intended for distribution to, or use by, any person or entity in any jurisdiction or country where such distribution or use would be contrary to law or regulation.