A Democratic sweep in next month鈥檚 US election would boost Asian equities, while reducing the allure of the region鈥檚 bonds, according to money managers and strategists.
A Joe Biden victory along with Democrats winning control of both houses of Congress is likely to spark substantial fiscal stimulus, benefiting Asian stocks by reviving the US economy and trade flows, according to BNP Paribas Asset Management and Credit Suisse Group AG. Such a backdrop could push Treasury yields higher, curbing appetite for debt from countries such as South Korea and Thailand, historical patterns show.
鈥淭he real key is what happens with Congress, more so than what happens with the presidency,鈥 said Daniel Morris, senior investment strategist at BNP Paribas Asset Management in London. 鈥淢arkets will focus more on the fiscal stimulus as opposed to any big increase in taxes. If US growth improves, they鈥檙e going to be importing more from Asia.鈥
With less than four weeks to go until the election and polls showing President Donald J. Trump trailing his rival, investors are adjusting portfolio positions. To be sure, many are cautious after 2016鈥檚 race, when most pundits thought Hillary Clinton would beat Trump. Fears of a contested or delayed result have sparked demand for volatility trades, such as in yen options, as a hedge.
Vital for Asia will be a dilution of trade frictions under Biden, said Dan Fineman and Kin Nang Chik, analysts at Credit Suisse. They see a reduction in uncertainty currently facing businesses due to the trade war.
ELECTION DEBATE
US-China friction was among the topics discussed in the vice presidential debate Wednesday between Kamala Harris and Mike Pence in Salt Lake City. Ms. Harris told Pence that the Trump administration had 鈥渓ost鈥 the trade war.
While both Ms. Harris and Mr. Pence maintained views on protecting the US, her criticism of the effectiveness of the trade spat could be taken as a sign that a Biden government would be 鈥渓ess combative鈥 with China, said Jingyi Pan, a strategist at IG Asia Pte.
The MSCI Asia Pacific index of stocks rose as much as 0.6% on Thursday to the highest level in five weeks. The gauge has risen more than 2% this month, exceeding the 1.7% increase in the S&P 500 index.
In the event that Mr. Biden pushes through another round of fiscal aid, an attendant increase in Treasury yields could weaken returns from some emerging-market bonds. South Korean and Thai debt is most at risk, according to data compiled by Bloomberg on 10 developing nations that looks at historical sensitivity to moves in US bonds.
Invesco鈥檚 David Chao says a knee-jerk sell-off in the dollar could follow a Democratic sweep of Congress as investors price in trade policy that isn鈥檛 as disruptive, as well as less 鈥渟hrill rhetoric鈥 between the US and China. 鈥淔oreign funds would pivot back to EM Asian currencies and assets,鈥 said Mr. Chao, a global markets strategist at the firm. 鈥 Gregor Stuart Hunter/Bloomberg


