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Muted market reactions to big events means one of two things: investors have concluded, it does not matter, or they are unsure how to quantify it.
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In the case of North Korea's nuclear test on Sunday, it's the latter.
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On Monday, havens including gold and the Yen rose while Japanese and Korean stocks fell, but all of the moves were relatively restrained.
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Japan, South Korea, and China, between them represent the second and third largest stock markets, and the two biggest countries in the emerging market universe.
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Japan and China are also both key players in global debt markets and the Yen is the third most-traded currency in the world.
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The stakes for global investors are indeed high.
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Although foreigners' limited interest in China's onshore markets reduces their significance in portfolios.
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They often say on the country's signals, too.
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On Monday, Shanghai and Shenzhen closed 0.4 and 0.6 per cent higher, even as Tokyo fell 1 per cent, and Seoul dropped 1.2.
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Assessing the market's risk posed by North Korea involves a situation that is at once familiar yet terrifyingly complex.
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Investors have spent decades factoring in the effects of hostilities between the rogue state and the outside world.
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A recent report by Nomura, which puts tensions at their highest since 1994, identifies 10 outcomes under four scenarios.
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They span negotiations, to US intervention, or even a military coup.
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Few, if any, analysts believe that outright war is the most likely outcome.
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Even those factoring in the potential for actual conflict struggle to measure it.
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In spite of their analysis, Nomura's team concluded the effect on Korean stocks from a war would likely be too catastrophic to deal in any specifics.
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The scale of Monday's moves in the Yen, Tokyo stocks, gold, and the Korean Won would not rank as a top 10 event for any of them for 2017.
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Monday's US bank holiday would have played a part, too, in dampening the reception with only limited trading of treasuries, and no Wall Street action to look to.
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The only market with an outsized reaction on Monday was the Korean stock market, as 1.2 per cent fall, ranks as its fourth worst day this year.
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The other ones, the worst ones, came in July and August.
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Now, this suggests that even as more global assets are holding their nerve, Korean investors are starting to price in some scarier outcomes