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KEZI – Most Asian stock markets recovered Monday after last week’s historic sell-off as governments around the world intensified efforts to boost the ailing financial system.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index, which tumbled more than 7 percent Friday, opened over 2 percent but shed its gains to trade about 360.50 points higher, or 2.44 percent, at 15,157.37.
In Australia, the S&P/ASX200 index was up 4 percent in response to a government plan to guarantee bank and other lender deposits for three years. The benchmark plunged over 8 percent on Friday, its biggest single-day fall ever.
South Korea’s benchmark gained more than 2 percent and Singapore’s key stock measure was up about 1 percent. But China’s key Shanghai index traded 2 percent lower, while Taiwan’s benchmark lost more than 3 percent.
Reuters HK – Asian hedge fund managers are waiting with dread to see if tough new short selling restrictions sweep across the region after Australia and Taiwan joined U.S. and UK regulators in cracking down on the practice.
Major Asian markets, such as Japan and Hong Kong, have so far held their fire. But industry executives, many angry with the recent restrictions, said the combination of market volatility and politics makes the outcome impossible to predict.
"My fundamental view is that it is utterly idiotic. In the current market environment, the priority I would have thought would be to encourage liquidity," said Peter Douglas, founder of Singapore-based hedge fund consultancy GFIA.
"Most regulators that I’ve met have been fundamentally quite sensible people, so you have to make the assumption this is driven a mixture of politics and public opinion. And that makes it very difficult to predict the course."
BusinessWeek- Lee Shyan-Yuan, one of several commissioners at Taiwan’s Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC), believes attracting hedge funds to the market would be a smart move.
He is courting hedge funds to invest in Taiwan and raise money from investors in that market. That’s a bold move from a regulator, considering that many of his peers in other markets in Asia have not yet fully embraced hedge funds; some even still consider them the enemy.
Hedge funds, after all, have been blamed—justifiably or not—at least in part for some of the difficult periods in Asia’s financial markets, most notably the regional financial crisis beginning in 1997.