Mark Galasiewski photo

GLOBAL, MARKETS

Mark Galasiewski

Editor,

Asian-Pacific Financial Forecast

  • Editor, Asian-Pacific Financial Forecast
  • Graduate of Middlebury College in East Asian Studies
  • Lived in Japan for Most of 1990s

About Mark

Mark Galasiewski lived in Japan for most of the 1990s. A graduate of Middlebury College (Vermont, USA) in East Asian studies, he is fluent in Japanese and conversant in Mandarin Chinese. In his monthly commentaries, Mr. Galasiewski not only discovers opportunities in Asian-Pacific markets, but also shows how cultural and political events relate to financial trends in the region. He has traveled to many of the countries he writes about, including Japan, China, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand, Cambodia, Egypt, and Jordan.

Mark's Videos

Elliott Wave International's analysis shows that Asia, emerging markets, and commodities began multi-year, five-wave advances at the March 2020 lows. An exception is the Shanghai Composite, which continues to trace out a contracting triangle from its 2007 high. The negative mood trend driving the contracting triangle has inspired China's crackdown on its most successful companies and individuals in recent years. In contrast, the positive social mood trend in India has caused stock prices to advance impulsively and inspired laissez-faire policy changes that will ultimately create jobs and wealth. Other markets in the Asian-Pacific, Latin America and emerging EMEA will also rise impulsively for several years along with commodities.
Elliott Wave International's Chief Equity Analyst for Asia and Emerging Markets, Mark Galasiewski (gala-SHEV-skee), shows you how he has used the timing of headline news events such as terrorist attacks, political scandals, and even epidemic disease outbreaks to support his bullish forecasts for Asian and emerging market stocks. Using real-time examples published in EWI's monthly Asian-Pacific Financial Forecast, he will reveal how Asia and emerging markets offer an extraordinary laboratory for observing social events through the lens of Socionomics, Robert Precthter's theory of financial and social causality. You will learn principles that you can apply to any major stock market index in the world, and you will come away better equipped to capitalize on the counterintuitive relationship between social mood, markets, and news.

Newsletter Contributions

Asian-Pacific Financial Forecast

At the start of every month, APFF gives you the longer-term view of the main Asian-Pacific stock indexes as well as insight into the region's economic and social trends.

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