North Korea

Is Pyongyang Crying Wolf Again?

Posted by Rosalind Mathieson on May 25, 2010
Asia-Pacific, Currencies, Emerging Markets, Financial Markets, Government, North Korea / Comments Off

The problem for financial markets when it comes to North Korea is knowing when things have gone from bad to nuclear.

All too often we have witnessed an episode of barb-throwing between the North and South, accompanied by any number of threatening or retaliatory measures: Withdrawal of aid, testing of missiles, testing of nuclear weapons, border skirmishes and such.

Over the decades that Pyongyang and Seoul have remained in limbo from a war that never officially ended, one feels we’ve seen it all.

That makes this week’s events sound a bit like the boy who called wolf.

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North Korea Surprised China – Gates

Posted by Gabriella Stern on May 28, 2009
China, North Korea, Washington / 1 Comment

robert-m-gatesU.S. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates – traveling to Singapore for a defense conference – says China was surprised by North Korea’s test of a nuclear device earlier this week. You’ll recall the device was bigger than its first-ever such test, in 2006, and was followed by a flurry of short-range missile test fires. “Just based on what the Chinese government has said publicly, they’re clearly pretty unhappy about the nuclear test in particular, and they weren’t very happy about the missile test, either,” the WSJ’s Peter Spiegel quotes Gates as saying. This is enormously significant; one can only guess at the non-public knowledge Gates has of China’s reaction to Pyongyang’s shenanigans. What’s shaping up is a strong, united approach to the North Korean nuclear dictatorship led by the world’s two superpowers. It will be interesting to see what role Russia plays but Moscow will probably calculate there’s no upside to dissing Washington and Beijing on this particular issue. Here’s the WSJ story with additional Gates comments: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124356144592465073.html Continue reading…

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North Korea Escalation

Posted by Gabriella Stern on May 26, 2009
North Korea, South Korea, Washington / Comments Off

Earlier this week currency and stock markets more or less took North Korea’s nuclear device test detonation in stride – ditto the short-range missile tests. Today feels different. Pyongyang has just said it might act militarily as South Korea joins the U.S.-led, anti-nuclear Proliferation Security Initiative. It also issued some other provocative statements, including that it won’t guarantee the safety of offshore shipping traffic.  North Korea’s harsh warning comes in the wake of its first detonation since 2006 - and a much bigger one – and an unusual cluster of short-range missile firings. It amounts to an escalation of tensions which investors have to consider factoring into their decisions. A WSJ op-ed by three American elder statesmen calls for President Obama to lead a renewed deterrance effort involving Russia and China. The fact that Beijing responded to Monday’s nuclear detonation with strong words for Pyongyang may be a sign it will participate fully in a U.S.-led effort. Here’s the piece:  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124338405214956695.html  Continue reading…

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North Korea Nuclear Test X4

Posted by Gabriella Stern on May 24, 2009
North Korea, South Korea / Comments Off

north-korea-mapLatest Update: It has now emerged that North Korea tested three short-range missiles today in addition to a nuclear device which it detonated underground (which was initially detected as an earthquake; see below.) Markets continue to take the news in stride, with South Korea’s won the main victim and the yen also under pressure, given Japan’s proximity. (That said, markets are thin today because the U.K. and U.S. are on holiday.) Does this relatively unusual cluster of test firings/detonations mean North Korea’s neighbors are in greater danger than before? In the recent past, North Korea has tended to conduct such tests in isolation. The country’s first and only other known nuclear device test was in October 2006, according to DJN. Pyongyang claims today’s device was bigger than the first. A long-range missile was tested in April. At the time, North Korea described it as a “satellite” but various governments identified it as a missile. As governments roundly condemn today’s developments, arms control experts will surely puzzle out the deterrance issue in the context of a political transition under way in North Korea. This WSJ story by Jay Solomon, Evan Ramstad and Peter Spiegel is very illuminating: “North Korea Plans Kim Succession, U.S. Believes.” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124304434715249127.html

Earlier Update: North Korea has also test-fired a short-range missile. The WSJ says a statement from the country’s state-run media refers to the government’s ”military first” policy, which is known as Songun. This would seem to support analysts’ views that the North Korean military’s power is on the ascent.

Earlier: DJN’s flashing news that North Korea may have tested a nuclear device.  It appears the nuclear test caused rumblings so strong that the U.S. Geological Survey tentatively detected a temblor registering 4.7 on the Richter scale. South Korea’s Yonhap news agency says the Seoul government detected an “artificial earthquake” – suggesting the quake was actually the aftermath of a North Korea nuclear test. The  Kospi (Korean stock market index) slid as did the won. The Korean stock exchange is now halted. Continue reading…

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Pyongyang’s Damp Squib

Posted by Gabriella Stern on April 06, 2009
China, Politics, Stock Market, Washington / 1 Comment

Asian stock markets are powering higher today (Monday) – unbothered by  North Korea’s missile/rocket/thingamajig launch. The bullies of Pyongyang are being roundly ignored by currency markets as well. With Western nations mildly tut-tutting from the U.N., John Bolton, writing in the WSJ today, sees a victory for North Korea and its enablers, China and Russia. His opinion piece is worth a look – if only because Bolton-ites likely believe investors shouldn’t get too comfortable with an emerging world order in which the U.S. and allies get pushed around by the peculiar likes of Kim Jong Il and, more worryingly, the bosses in Tehran.

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