Showing posts with label south korea www.koreality.com economic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south korea www.koreality.com economic. Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2009

Foreign investors lead Kosdaq rebound

Foreign investors are leading the current Kosdaq rally, amid mounting concerns over the overly heated secondary stock market, industry officials said yesterday.

While institutional investors - who had long been at the forefront of purchasing tech-loaded Kosdaq stocks - have recently turned away from the market, more foreigners have been replacing them to lead the bullish trend of the Kosdaq. Analysts said the secondary bourse may move above the 500 point level soon, the first since last August.

According to FnGuide, an online financial information provider, yesterday, expatriates posted net sales of 565.7 billion ($425.8 million) worth of Kosdaq-listed stocks for the past three years - 119.9 billion won in July, 260.9 billion in February and 184.9 billion in March. This month, however, they have recorded net purchasing of 41.9 billion won in the market already.

Institutions, on the other hand, posted net sales of 75.5 billion won over the time. For the past three months, they reported net purchasing of 680.3 billion won worth of Kosdaq-listed shares. "Since the beginning of this year, institutions have thought highly of Kosdaq company's fundamental outlook," said Kim Jin-ho, an analyst of Hana Daetoo Securities, in a recent report.

"Foreign investors seem to have finally opened their eyes to the global competitiveness of the market," he continued.

IT companies have been especially popular among foreigners, as they recorded net buying of 29.2 billion won worth of IT hardware-related shares so far this month. Last month, they posted net sales of 3.6 billion won worth of related stocks.

By company, Megastudy, a Seoul-based education company deriving a huge chunk of revenues from its online operations, sold 1.82 billion won worth of its stocks to foreign investors this month, followed by touch screen solution company Digitech System (1.5 billion won), CJ Home Shopping (490 million won) and Kiwoom Securities (30 million won).

Industry specialists advise not to make blind investments in pursuit of quick profit realization.

"Foreign investors are completely performance oriented, even in Kosdaq. Popularity of comparatively crisis-resistant companies, such as Megastudy and video game makers, proves it," Jung Myung-ji, researchers of Samsung Securities, said in a report.

http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/NEWKHSITE/data/html_dir/2009/04/11/200904110044.asp
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Sunday, March 29, 2009

Korea’s Fiscal Soundness Ranks 7th in G20

The nation is in a much better position to cope with the ongoing global economic slump than the United States, Britain, Japan, and other advanced economies, thanks to its sound fiscal finance, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Thursday.

The ratio of national debt to gross domestic product (GDP) for Korea is projected to reach 32.9 percent this year, up from 32.7 percent in 2008, ranking the seventh lowest among G20 economies. The G20 average will likely reach 72.5 percent.

Given its relatively low debt-to-GDP-ratio, the nation has more room to pump money into the economy and its fiscal soundness will unlikely suffer much even if it draws up an estimated 30 trillion won surplus budget.

Korea's debt ratio is expected to rise to 33 percent in 2010 but fall back to 29.3 percent by 2014 as the global economy recovers.

The IMF forecast that Japan's debt-to-GDP-ratio will top 217 percent in 2009 as its government continues to spend taxpayers' money to prevent the world's second largest economy from heading further south. The debt ratio for the United States will reach 81.2 percent, followed by Germany with 76.1 percent and France with 72.3 percent.

In particular, Britain is expected to see the debt-to-GDP ratio jump sharply down the road as its government spends more taxpayers' money than other advanced countries to keep the economy afloat. It has been the hardest hit economy by the worldwide financial crisis because the financial industry accounts for a greater portion of its economic output, compared to other economies.

The IMF said the debt-to-GDP ratio for Britain will likely stand at 61 percent this year and continue to rise to 68.7 percent in 2010 and 76.2 percent in 2014. It presented a similar outlook for the Unites States and Japan, with the national debt of the world's largest economy accounting for 99.5 percent of GDP in 2014.

The Washington-based organization said countries will be saddled with snowballing fiscal deficits for the time being as they try to prop up their troubled economies through stimulus steps, but stressed when the economy rebounds, governments around the world should make efforts to restore fiscal responsibility.

The IMF also said they need to overhaul pension schemes and other state-sponsored programs to more effectively improve their fiscal health.

http://www.investkorea.org
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