Der Thai-Aktien-Index fiel heute um über 10 % (18 % in der Spitze). Die anderen Asien-Märkte, vor allem in Singapur, Malaysia und Indonesien, wurden davon angesteckt. Der Kursverfall in Thailand war der schärfste an einem Tag seit der Asienkrise 1997. Hört sich nach Bärenfutter an.
ASIA MARKETS
Asian markets slide on new risk fearsBy Chris Oliver, MarketWatch
Last Update: 1:38 AM ET Dec 19, 2006
HONG KONG (MarketWatch) --
Asian stocks fell sharply in afternoon trading Tuesday with share indexes in Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia leading the decline, as regional markets paced a stock market rout in Thailand after the central bank moved to impose tough capital controls to stem a rise in its currency.
Thailand's leading stock index plunged 10.14% after the central bank announced new capital controls which take effect Tuesday.
"It is group contagion with people worried that other central banks like the Philippines and South Korea, which have also seen strong currency appreciation this year, may adopt similar draconian measures," said Shahab Jalinoos, head of foreign exchange strategy at ABN Amro in Singapore. "If you own a stock and you know in the future the likelihood of a foreigner buying that stock is massively reduced, you would probably want to sell."
The Nikkei fell 1 % to 16,789.30 in afternoon trading. The Tokyo Stock Price Index, or Topix, slipped 1.2% to 1,645.50.
Singapore's Straits Times Index fell 1.6%.
Australia's S&P/ ASX 200 fell 0.6% and South Korea's Kospi was down 0.3. Malaysia's KLSE Composite fell 1.7% and Indonesia's JSX Composite fell 1.6%., Taiwan's Weighted Price Index erased earlier gains to trade 0.2% lower and China's Shanghai Composite fell 0.2%.
Late Monday, central banking authorities in Thailand unveiled new measures to limit speculative inflows which had lifted the Thai baht 17% against the U.S. dollar year to date.
Among the controls outlined by the Bank of Thailand and which went into effect Tuesday, banks will be required to hold 30% of all foreign inflows of more than $20,000 on deposit. Offshore investors must keep their funds in the country for at least one year or face stiff withdrawal penalties. Funds held on deposit will not earn any interest.
Funds related to trade in goods and services are exempted from the new capital controls. "We think a significant impact will be felt in the Thai stock market given the large exposure of foreign investors," wrote ABN Amro strategist Irene Cheung in an e-mailed report. "The 30% reserve will be a major hurdle to foreign asset managers, with the commitment to an investment period of at least one year an even bigger obstacle for an active investment strategy." Cheung added the new rules could see Thailand's weighting in regional stock indices downgraded or even removed.
In Hong Kong the blue-chip Hang Seng Index ended the morning session down 2.3% to 18,955.37. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index, a gauge of 37 China-incorporated companies listed in Hong Kong, fell 1.8% to 9,068.65...