Europe Crisis Poses
An escalation in Europes debt crisis may trigger a selloff in Asian assets, force foreign banks to cut lending to the region and disrupt its currency markets, the International Monetary Fund said.
Asias growth has slowed since the second quarter of 2011, the fund said in a report today, cutting its forecast for this years expansion to 6.3 percent from an April estimate of 6.8 percent. Inflationary pressures across the region are still elevated and financial conditions remain accommodative in most of Asia, the IMF said.
An escalation of euro area financial turbulence and a renewed slowdown in the U.S. could have severe macroeconomic and financial spillovers to Asia, it said. Since 2009, investors from advanced economies have built up substantial positions in Asian markets. A sudden liquidation of these positions could trigger a loss of confidence, and contagion could spread from bond and equity markets to currency and other markets.
An escalation in Europes debt crisis may trigger a selloff in Asian assets, force foreign banks to cut lending to the region and disrupt its currency markets, the International Monetary Fund said.
Asias growth has slowed since the second quarter of 2011, the fund said in a report today, cutting its forecast for this years expansion to 6.3 percent from an April estimate of 6.8 percent. Inflationary pressures across the region are still elevated and financial conditions remain accommodative in most of Asia, the IMF said.
An escalation of euro area financial turbulence and a renewed slowdown in the U.S. could have severe macroeconomic and financial spillovers to Asia, it said. Since 2009, investors from advanced economies have built up substantial positions in Asian markets. A sudden liquidation of these positions could trigger a loss of confidence, and contagion could spread from bond and equity markets to currency and other markets.