Foreign investors are aggressively pulling capital out of Asian stock markets as a historic surge in U.S. bond yields fuels intense anxiety over corporate profit margins and regional currency depreciation.
The Key Numbers & Capital Outflows:
- Total Monthly Exodus: Foreign portfolio investors have dumped a net $24.75 billion of regional equities so far in May 2026.
- The Weekly Panic: Momentum collapsed entirely last week, accounting for a staggering, record-breaking $17.27 billion of the total monthly divestment.
- The Yield Catalyst: The 30-year U.S. Treasury yield spiked to 5.2%, its absolute highest level since July 2007, fundamentally re-rating global equity risk premiums. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield also climbed to 4.69%.
Where the Capital Blew Out (By Country):
- South Korea: Experienced the worst of the routing, absorbing a catastrophic $13.14 billion in foreign outflows in a single week.
- Taiwan: Lost $2.88 billion in local shares last week.
- India: Registered $1.35 billion in net selling.
- Indonesia & Thailand: Bucked the weekly trend slightly, drawing isolated, defensive monthly inflows of $511 million and $215 million respectively.
The Structural Vulnerability:
According to HSBC’s APAC equity strategy division, growth-heavy markets like South Korea and Taiwan are highly vulnerable because 30% of all dedicated Asian fund exposure is concentrated in just a handful of massive hardware and tech names within these two nations. When global macros flash “de-risk” due to 20-year highs in long-term U.S. borrowing costs, passive and active funds are forced to downsize these highly concentrated tech blocks, triggering outsized local market volatility.
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