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Thursday, 20 June 2013 00:54 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Land of the rising stocks
Japan’s Nikkei, already up by a stellar 25% this year, is expected to rise quite a bit more, topping the table of the expected best performers in the poll with a projected 51% gain in 2013.
Respondents cited a weaker yen and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s radical fiscal and monetary expansion policies, dubbed “Abenomics”, as the main reason for such a strong performance.
“Abenomics’ first arrow, or monetary easing, has been successful as it has fixed the excessively strong yen, and as a result it will lift company profits,” said Masayuki Kubota, senior fund manager at Daiwa SBI Investments.
Other indexes in emerging Asia have not fared so well, but hopes of an economic recovery and attractive valuations should ensure Chinese, Hong Kong, South Korean and Indian shares will finish the year up strongly.
Their Latin American peers have endured a torrid 2013, with Brazilian stocks more than 19% in the red so far this year - easily the worst performer as economic conditions there deteriorated.
Although analysts largely expect better days ahead for Brazilian shares, there was a lot of uncertainty in the poll.
“To be honest, it’s hard to forecast, considering there are many variables we are encountering now,” said Rafael Castro, a trader with brokerage H.Commcor in Sao Paulo.
“If the weakness in the economy continues, if the central bank isn’t able to create more confidence in the market, we are just going to fall further.”
Western slowdown
In Europe and North America, analysts saw only limited upside for equities from here, although fewer than a fifth of all forecasts predicted a negative return between now and the end of 2013.
“While the bull market isn’t over yet, we do see limited upside at these levels,” said Savita Subramanian, head of US equity and quantitative strategy at BofAML Global Research.
The US S&P 500, which has surged just shy of 15% this year, is expected to gain modestly from here until year-end, roughly 4%.
Similarly, most major European indexes are expected to add around 4 to 5% before the year is out, with London-listed and German stocks faring best so far in 2013.