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Punch Drunk Traders Across Asia Ready for Another Week of Drama

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(Bloomberg) -- After a week in which Asian stocks posted both their biggest-ever plunge and their largest one-day gain since 2008, investors in the region are working weekends, skipping sleep, interrupting business trips, poring over social media and focusing on short-term trades, alert to the fact that one man at the furthest point away from them on the planet can upend markets again at any moment.

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No wonder financial professionals in the region are on edge. Besides the volatility in equities, Japanese government bonds posted their worst day ever last Tuesday, credit spreads blew out the most since 2000 over the week, the Chinese yuan sank to its weakest level since 2007 and the Indonesian rupiah set an all-time low. The Friday before, the Australian dollar tumbled the most in a day since the global financial crisis.

All those moves pivoted around US President Donald Trump’s trade policy decisions and officials’ responses to that across Asia Pacific. And that’s why it’s proving so disruptive for markets in the region.

Currency traders will be first to react as markets reopen Monday morning local time — after the dollar sank against almost all major counterparts.

This past week was “horribly tiring and mentally draining because even before you can analyse a set of parameters that’s put in front of you, as crazy as that set is, then a new level of crazy hits you,” said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank. The global financial crisis was “a lot more urgent, a lot more severe. But the main difference then was it was not engineered by the whims of one person and we were in it together. That’s how it’s different.”

Even though investors were fearful of events last weekend, the reaction in markets was more extreme than many countenanced.

Going into Monday, Nick Ferres, chief investment officer of Vantage Point Asset Management in Singapore, which runs an Asia-focused global macro fund, had shifted almost half the portfolio into cash.

As markets opened, he realized this wasn’t enough. “We were defensive but I wish I had done more,” he said. MSCI’s Asia Pacific Index slumped by the most in its three-decade history. “I worked most of Sunday to prepare for Monday. I’ve had roughly three hours sleep on average each night this week,” Ferres said.