Domino Effect -Australia's Exposure to a Sino-Taiwanese ConflictA potential armed conflict in the Taiwan Strait poses significant geopolitical risks with profound economic implications for Australia. As a key member of the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, Australia’s strategic interests are deeply intertwined with regional stability. The potential impact of such a conflict on the Australian economy.
Economic Impact Assessment
A Sino-Taiwanese conflict would likely trigger severe economic disruptions for Australia. The nation's reliance on China as a primary trading partner, particularly in the mining and agricultural sectors, would exacerbate the negative impacts. Key sectors and their potential implications are outlined below:
Mining: As a dominant contributor to Australia's GDP and a significant component of the S&P/ASX 200, the mining sector would face substantial challenges. Disruptions to iron ore and coal exports to China would negatively impact major mining companies such as BHP Group and Rio Tinto, collectively representing approximately 5% of the index.
Agriculture: Given China's status as a key market for Australian agricultural products, the sector would experience significant revenue losses. This would affect companies involved in grain, meat, and dairy production, although their overall weight in the S&P/ASX 200 is relatively smaller.
Tourism: The tourism industry, still recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, would face renewed challenges due to decreased international travel. Qantas Airways, a prominent component of the S&P/ASX 200, would be directly affected by declining passenger numbers.
Financial Services: The broader financial system would likely experience increased volatility, credit rating downgrades, and elevated insurance claims. Australia's major banks, including Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, and ANZ, which collectively hold substantial weight in the S&P/ASX 200, would be exposed to these risks.
Implications for the S&P/ASX 200
The S&P/ASX 200, as a market-capitalization-weighted index, would undoubtedly reflect the economic challenges posed by a Sino-Taiwanese conflict. Given the significant weightings of mining and financial services in the index, a sharp decline is highly probable. The severity and duration of the market downturn would depend on the scale and duration of the conflict.
Historical Precedent
While direct comparisons are limited due to evolving economic structures and geopolitical contexts, historical data from World War II and the Korean War provide valuable insights. Both periods were characterized by significant market volatility, with sharp declines followed by varying recovery periods.
Conclusion
A Sino-Taiwanese conflict presents substantial economic risks for Australia, with the S&P/ASX 200 serving as a barometer of these challenges. The potential impact on the Australian economy and financial markets underscores the importance of robust risk management strategies and contingency planning.
Spasx200
All readied up for long the autralian indexI am seing the australian stock market selloff slowing down, following a selloff due to the global fear in the world that produced dumps of everything.
Going to keep an eye on the dow. Right now the dow is the big bubble in the world, and it is where every one has some money. The whole market cap is insane, in particular you got the top us (and some chinese) tech stocks that have ginourmous market caps. Funny how Wallmart makes 500 billion in revenue (10 bil net income) but its market cap is far behind, while Amazon with 1/3 revenue & net income (175 bil & 3 bil) has this monstruous market cap for the simple reason of being a "tech" thing... Most tech stocks are... Apple is a crazy company and even Buffet bought shares close to ath, their net income dwarfs all the rest at 60 billion btw... BUT if we go into a recession people are not going to feel rich and are not going to buy overpriced "luxury tech". The whole Apple success is super fragile in my opinion.
I see the dow going into some kind of complacency OR going to make a triple top. Unless it dumps hard it will not prevent Australian stocks from bouncing.
Back to the subject.
To make this simple, Australian PE ratios are at average, even in the lows compared to the past 20 years, the dividends are ok, pretty average.
The country is not in any trade war, there is no drama around it, its companies are solid and yes the us dollar going up might hurt them a little, but Oil is also going down not so much a big deal for them thought.
Here are the biggest companies:
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group
Aristocrat Leisure
Amcor
AGL Energy
Australian Stock Exchange
APA GroupStapled Security
Aurizon
AMP
Alumina
Bank of Queensland
Australia is one of the richest country in the world (by person ofc), behind Luxembourg Switzerland and all the small places.
Like the swiss they are very service oriented & in particular in banking etc.
Do not want to go super in depth, but to make this simple there is no reason for it to go down massively it's all fear because the the overvalued us tech stocks.
The FED talking about hiking rates in december so eyes open... Maybe Aus bounces before that and we can get run away with our profits before this happens :bitconnect:.
Dax and Cac 40 are in the same boat
Will patiently wait for my target to get reached and go long unless there is a terror attack or something. Oh and also, bullish divergence on oscillators.