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Stocks plunge in Seoul as record sell-off leads to stock market rout

Investors dumped bets in the chip industry on Wednesday as they feared that a growing Middle East conflict would cause an oil shock, which could increase inflation and delay interest rate reductions.

Asia is heavily dependent on the energy imports that are shipped through the nearly closed 'Strait of Hormuz'. This was evident in Seoul where the session ended with the stock market dropping 12%. It was the biggest drop ever recorded.

Over the past two days, the benchmark lost over 18% of its worth while the currency fell to a low not seen in 17 years.

Japan's Nikkei dropped 3.9%, and Taiwan stocks fell 4.3%. Investors fled from semiconductor makers which had been the hot bet of the past few months. This was likely to cover losses elsewhere and reduce risks.

Charu Chanana is the chief investment strategist for Saxo, a Singapore-based brokerage. She said that "Asia’s selloff has become disorderly" because markets no longer treat this as an 'one week headline shock'.

The "sell-what-you can" phase is spreading.

S&P futures slid 0.6% lower, while European futures traded flat after an initial bounce.

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon stated that he was surprised by the markets' "benign reaction" up to now.

"There is a cumulative reaction to everything that has happened and it's much more harsh." In a speech he gave in Sydney, he stated that we had not seen the cumulative effect up to this point.

He said: "I don't think the markets will be able to digest what happened in the short-term and medium-term for a few weeks. I cannot speculate on how this would unfold."

Rate Cuts in Question

Benchmark Brent crude futures are on the rise, up 13% in the past week to $82.08 per barrel. Prices have fallen since U.S. president Donald Trump announced an insurance guarantee for Gulf shipping. He also said that the Navy may accompany oil tankers as they pass through the Strait of Hormuz.

Since Saturday, U.S. forces and Israeli forces have been pounding Iran. Iranian drones and rockets have also struck Gulf oil refineries as well as U.S. embassies located in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.

Damien Boey is a portfolio strategist with Wilson Asset Management, Sydney. He said: "Oil infrastructure appears to be under attack...?so we have to consider how long this will last."

After an initial rally, bond markets are under pressure now as investors bet that higher oil prices would stoke inflation and delay rate reductions. The Federal Reserve is more likely to maintain rates in June, according to traders.

"For the United States, this is very clearly inflationary...so, the market's reassessing if the Fed can deliver any rate reductions at all this year," Andrew Lilley said, chief rates strategy for Australian investment firm Barrenjoey.

DASH FOR CASH

Cash is the winner, as money market funds are flooded with flow from higher-risk bets. Gold and the Australian dollar were also hit over night as investors closed winning trades.

In Asia, gold remained at $5,163 an ounce, but the Australian dollar dropped to just under 70 cents. Overnight, Wall Street indexes recovered from heavier losses. The S&P?500 ended 0.8% lower.

Higher energy costs pushed the euro to $1.16. Gas prices in Europe have increased by?66% over the past two days.

The energy crisis is also affecting coal prices. Australia's benchmark Newcastle rate rose almost 17% in the past week.

"For the markets to find a bottom, we need to see signs of de-escalation or status quo on the front line, which would then shift the focus to fundamentals," Rupal Agarwal said, Asia quant strategy at Bernstein, in Singapore.

(source: Reuters)