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Try to imagine for just a moment, the Dow Jones Industrials climbing by 54%
or 5,842 points to set a new all-time record high of 16,670. Absurd, unthinkable,
just plain crazy, you might say. But that's precisely what occurred in the
Krazy Korean Kospi index in 2005, to earn the honor as the best performing
stock market in the world. The doubling of Kospi juggernaut from two years
ago is all the more impressive, when one considers the Korean won's sizeable
gains against the Chinese yuan, the Japanese yen, and the US dollar over that
time period.
Watching the Kospi climb day after day, without much hesitation, to complete
its stunning 54% gain, reminds us to never underestimate the Asian penchant
for high-stakes risk-taking, especially at home. But in dealing with the Kospi
index in 2006, remember the advice of the legendary trader Jesse Livermore, "Stocks
are never too high for you to begin buying, or too low to begin selling. But
after the initial transaction, do not make a second unless the first shows
you a profit."

Korean ordinary shares are expensive to trade. Including dealer markups for
local exchange fees, currency conversion fees, and broker commissions, the
foreign retail investor can pay a round-turn commission of 7% to trade in Seoul.
However, there are a handful of blue chip ADR's listed in New York, such as
Kookmin Bank (KB), Shinhan Financial (SHG), Posco Steel (PKX), and LG Philips
LCD (LPL). There are also two Exchange Traded funds, iShares Korea (ticker
EWY) and the Korea Fund (KF) that closely track the Kospi index, and can
be traded online.
To trade the broader EWY and KF successfully, one needs to know what
makes the Korean Kospi tick. It is important to know that Samsung Electronics,
005930.KS is the big gorilla on the Kospi Composite index, accounting for 20%
of the market's total capitalization. Samsung Electronics soared by 50% in
2005, taking the world's largest memory chip maker above $100 billion in market
value, to become one of four Asian companies to have reached that market scale.
Samsung is expected to earn a handsome profit of 2.84 trillion won in the
first quarter, thanks to an ever-increasing demand for its NAND flash memory
chips and liquid crystal display panels, which account for 70% of its profit.
Samsung and other heavy hitters, such as Hyundai Motors and LG Electronics
are leading the Kospi juggernaut to stratospheric heights with booming exports
to China and Asia, Europe, and to a lesser extent, the United States.
Unlike US economic growth, which is heavily dependent upon asset inflation
in the stock market and real estate to sustain consumer spending, Korea's
income gains were fueled by manufacturing and exports. South Korea 's industrial
production rose by 5% in November 2005, to stand 12.2% higher from a year earlier,
and the fastest expansion in six years, as automakers and chipmakers hustled
to meet record export orders and rebounding domestic demand.
Exports account for 40% of Korea's $680 billion economy, which reached
an all-time high of $284.7 billion in 2005, up 12.2% from $253.8 billion a
year earlier. Those impressive gains followed a whopping 31% increase in exports
in 2004. South Korea's electronics exports rose 6.5% to $102.9 billion in 2005,
ranking fourth behind Japan, the US and China, and creating a net profit of
$46.7 billion. Electronics shipments were 38% of the nation's total exports,
compared with 8.7% in 1972.

The South Korean government expects Asia's fourth largest economy to export
as much as $320 billion in 2006, despite unfavorable foreign currency rates,
and assuming that the global economy will grow 4 % , the same as in 2005.
The Korean Kospi index is tracking the level of the nation's exports, which
have risen steadily from $11 billion in February 2001 to a record high of $25.8
billion in December 2005, and elevating the profits of Kospi blue-chip stocks.
The Kospi's rising fortunes are in large part due to booming exports to China,
which soared 25% last year on top of a 42% jump in 2004. China's economy grew
9.8% last year, and accounted for 22% of South Korea's total shipments abroad.
For the moment, the surging Chinese economy is fueling steady demand for parts,
components and intermediate goods from Korea. But as China becomes an ever-more-capable
manufacturer, it can also become a big threat to its tiny neighbor. This is
especially true in one of Korea's key industries, high-tech, where China is
making deep inroads. China is rapidly building its own steel, shipbuilding,
electronics and semiconductor industries that happen to be Korea's major export
items.
China has already trumped the US in 2004 as the world's leading exporter of
high-tech goods, and emerged as an economic power that other industrialized
countries can no longer ignore. China exported $180 billion worth of information
and communication technology goods in 2004, compared with US exports of $149
billion, the OECD said. China was likely to have kept its newly conquered top
spot in 2005, but confirmation must await more date collection.

Still, last year's big growth in Korean exports means that the quality of
Korean-made products, particularly semiconductors and ships, are world-class,
and it could take many years for China to compete with the likes of Samsung.
Semiconductors had the biggest share of South Korea's exports at 10.6 percent.
Automobiles made up 10.4%, and wireless equipment, including mobile phones,
were 9.7% of exports.
Korea's rising exports are all the more remarkable when on considers that
the dollar fell by 30% against the Korean won since early 2001, making
Korean exports more expensive for US consumers. And because China pegged it
currency to the dollar, Korean exports became 30% more expensive in China.
Yet, South Korea's five automakers sold a record 5.2 million vehicles worldwide
in 2005, up 16% from 2004.
Korean monetary authorities have long lived in fear of a weaker dollar that
could undermine its economy and issued tens of billions of foreign exchange
stabilization bonds, using the proceeds to buy dollars in the foreign exchange
market. The Bank of Korea amassed $210 billion of foreign currencies, mostly
held in dollars, but has only bought some extra time for Korean exporters through
its massive intervention effort. The central bank has not been able to reverse
the dollar's bearish trend.
Displaying amazing agility, Korean exporters reacted to the weaker US dollar
and a 15% drop in sales to the American market, by ramping up sales to Europe
by 18.6% in 2005, on top of a 17.6% gain the year before. The European Union
has replaced the United States as South Korea's second-largest export market
after China, the Ministry of Commerce said on December 11 th 2005.
South Korea exported $36 billion worth of goods to the United States in the
first eleven months of 2005, whereas its shipments to the EU totaled $38 billion.
South Korean exports to China during the same period amounted to $55.4 billion.
In 2004, Korea shipped more goods to the US than to the EU, with exports to
its respective trading partners adding up to $42.8 billion and $37.8 billion.
With the world's second largest economy in Japan emerging from seven years
of deflation and showing signs of sustainable growth, Kospi exporters might
have hoped to take advantage of this burgeoning market. But the Japanese yen's
24% devaluation against the won since the beginning of 2004 will make Korean
products a very tough sell in Tokyo, and more importantly, create big difficulties
in competing with Japanese exporters elsewhere.

So what could possibly go wrong for the Krazy Korean Kospi index in 2006,
with its Chinese neighbor poised for another spectacular year of 9% or more
growth?
Kospi exporters were gripped by anxiety on January 5th, when the US dollar
fell below the psychological 1000-won level, caused by exporters themselves,
who dumped dollars because they feared the dollar had no bottom. If the dollar
goes below 950-won, small and medium sized exporters will be hit particularly
hard.
Hyundai Motor chairman Chung Mong-koo warned in his New Year address that
the company could face a crisis from a weaker dollar. Every 100-won loss against
the dollar causes Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors to lose a combined 1.65 trillion
won ($1.65 billion) in revenues and 800 billion won in operating profits. Samsung
Electronics thinks a 100-won loss for the dollar to 950-won, would reduce its
sales by 2 trillion won, and LG Electronics expects a loss of 400 billion won
in profits.
But a stronger won would put Korea's largest steelmaker POSCO at an advantage
since it imports most raw materials, including iron ore. The won's 30% appreciation
against the dollar helped to partially offset a 40% rise in Abu Dhabi crude
prices and sharply higher base metal prices in 2005. Still, Korean imports
of natural resources including energy rose 21.9% in dollar terms. The country
imports almost all of its oil.
Seoul hasn't abandoned its interventionist ways, despite losing billions of
dollars in taxpayers' money when it tried to prevent the dollar from falling
below 1150-won in 2003-2004. Korea plans to sell 19.2 trillion won ($19.2 billion)
in Treasury bonds in 2006 to fund any foreign exchange intervention. But Korean
policymakers appear to have few options other than outright intervention, and
of course, "jawboning" to halt the dollar's slide, which can only buy time
and can't reverse a trend.
While Korea's domestic institutions were wildly enthusiastic about the Kospi
in 2005, foreign traders who bought Kospi stocks in 2003-04 were net sellers
of 3.2 trillion won of blue-chips last year. Instead, foreigners were net buyers
of $91.8 billion of Japanese stocks, and pumped $22.2 billion into Taiwan.
Still, foreigners are not abandoning Korea, and hold 39.7% of outstanding
shares on the main bourse. Foreigners account for about 20.5% of the daily
trading volume.
The won's exchange rate, China's economic growth rate, Korean exports, and
the price of crude oil, are the key variables to watch for the Krazy Korean
Kospi index.
This article may be re-printed for use in other publications with links to www.sirchartsalot.com .
If you are interested in reading our predictions for 2006 on the Korean Kospi,
the Nikkei-225, Gold, foreign currencies, crude oil, and natural resource stocks,
and many other markets, click on this link, Free
Trial Newsletter.
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Gary Dorsch
http://www.sirchartsalot.com/
Mr Dorsch worked on the trading floor of the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange for nine years as the chief Financial Futures Analyst
for three clearing firms, Oppenheimer Rouse Futures Inc, GH Miller and Company,
and a commodity fund at the LNS Financial Group.
As a transactional broker for Charles Schwab's Global
Investment Services department, Mr Dorsch handled thousands of customer
trades in 45 stock exchanges around the world, including Australia, Canada,
Japan, Hong Kong, the Euro zone, London, Toronto, South Africa, Mexico, and
New Zealand, and Canadian oil trusts, ADR's and Exchange Traded Funds.
He wrote a weekly newsletter from 2000 thru September 2005
called, "Foreign Currency Trends" for Charles Schwab's Global Investment
department, featuring inter-market technical analysis, to understand the dynamic
inter-relationships between the foreign exchange, global bond and stock markets,
and key industrial commodities.
Disclaimer: SirChartsAlot.com's analysis and insights
are based upon data gathered by it from various sources believed to be reliable,
complete and accurate. However, no guarantee is made by SirChartsAlot.com as
to the reliability, completeness and accuracy of the data so analyzed. SirChartsAlot.com
is in the business of gathering information, analyzing it and disseminating
the analysis for informational and educational purposes only. SirChartsAlot.com
attempts to analyze trends, not make recommendations. All statements and expressions
are the opinion of SirChartsAlot.com and are not meant to be investment advice
or solicitation or recommendation to establish market positions. Our opinions
are subject to change without notice. SirChartsAlot.com strongly advises readers
to conduct thorough research relevant to decisions and verify facts from various
independent sources.
Copyright © 2005-2009 SirChartsAlot,
Inc. All rights reserved.
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