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Foreign Selling in Asian Equities Rises as Bond Yields Climb

May 20 (Reuters) - Foreign selling in Asian equities has accelerated so far in May as investors turn cautious over the impact of war-driven ​inflation and higher borrowing costs on corporate margins across ‌the region.

Foreign investors have so far sold a net $24.75 billion of regional equities this month, with a record $17.27 billion of shares divested in the last ​week, LSEG data covering exchanges in South Korea, Taiwan, ​Thailand, India, Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines showed.

The 30-year ⁠U.S. Treasury yield climbed to its highest level since 2007 this ​week, adding pressure on Asian equities as higher long-term borrowing costs ​weighed on valuations, particularly in growth-heavy markets.

"Higher yields could increase pressure on equities as tighter financial conditions could weigh on valuations, particularly in growth sectors," ​said Paolo Broccardo, CEO at BankPro, in a note.

South Korean ​stocks faced a record $13.14 billion worth of foreign outflows in the last week. ‌Last ⁠week, investors also divested $2.88 billion of local shares in Taiwan, $1.35 billion in India and $184 million in Indonesia.

"Mainland China H-share, Hong Kong, Korea and Taiwan equities are traditionally most sensitive to an increase in ​yields," said Herald ​van der ⁠Linde, head of equity strategy for Asia Pacific at HSBC.

"30% of Asian funds’ exposure is to a ​handful of stocks in Korea and Taiwan. Any ​de-risking ⁠may cause more volatility in these markets," HSBC's Linde said.

Indonesian and Thai stocks have, however, still attracted $511 million and $215 million of foreign inflows, ⁠so ​far this month.

Reporting by Gaurav Dogra; Editing by Hugh Lawson

Source: Reuters


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