Friday Snapshot 6/27/08: Taipan Emerging Market Index Gets Caught in Down Draft and Falls 30.7%
With the markets getting crushed, it should come as no surprise that our Taipan Emerging Market index gets caught in the down draft. For the week ending 6/27/08, the index dropped 30.7%.
Key
ALL ORDINARIES IDX (ASX: ^AORD) Australia
BSE SENSEX (Bombay: ^BSESN) India
IBOVESPA SAO PAULO (^BVSP) Brazil
EGYPT CMA GENL INDX (Cairo: ^CCSI) Egypt
HANG SENG INDEX (HKSE: ^HSI) Hong Kong
COMPOSITE INDEX (Jakarta: ^JKSE) Jakarta
COMPOSITE INDEX (Kuala Lumpur: ^KLSE) Kuala Lumpar
KOSPI Composite Index (KSE: ^KS11) South Korea
MERVAL BUENOS AIRES (Buenos Aires: ^MERV) Argentina
IPC (Mexico: ^MXX) Mexico
NZX 50 INDEX GROSS (NZSE: ^NZ50) New Zealand
IGBM (Madrid: ^SMSI) Spain
TEL-AV TASE-100 IND (^TA100) Israel
TSEC weighted index (Taiwan: ^TWII) Taiwan
SSE Composite Index (Shanghai: 000001.SS) Shanghai
iShares MSCI South Africa Index (EZA) South Africa
RTSI INDEX (RUS: RTS.RS) Russia
ISHARES MSCI THAILAN (NYSEArca: THD) Thailand
iShares MSCI Turkey Invest Mkt Index (TUR) Turkey
The herd mentality of the major trading centers will usually prevail — regardless of the potential of individual emerging markets. You can see this with oil’s new highs triggering another sell-off. Yesterday, the Dow hit a two-year low. Citibank now seems like it will crumble and those reverberations are felt everywhere.
There is a bright spot, however…
Our biggest winner this week is the ISHARES MSCI THAILAN (NYSEArca: THD). This follows our trend for the past three weeks of Asian markets dominating the index.
Thailand has been on a tear of late. More and more major corporations are setting up factories there as China becomes too expensive.
Since January of this year, new manufacturing plants in Thailand have been announced by the likes of Japanese food giant, Ajinomoto Co.; the UK-based Plastics Capital; Toyota is building a new 150,000-square-foot diesel engine plant; Canon is doubling capacity for a printer plant outside of Hanoi; and Hanesbrands, the underwear maker, is setting up two new factories in Vietnam.
At the same time, Vietnam’s inflation hit 25.2% last month — one of the highest in our index.
Here’s my point: Vietnam has pretty much the same story to tell as other markets in our index. Some have higher inflation than others. Some haul in money from feeding the global commodity boom instead of manufacturing things. Yet, they are all dragged down by the horrible and terrifying stories making headlines in the U.S. and other industrialized countries.
All I could say at this point is that you have to wait this out. Is this a good time to double down? Very possible. Regardless, the long-term prospects of emerging markets remains quite strong.
Have a great weekend.
–Irwin Greenstein




