Most Asian markets rose yesterday as traders overcame early jitters about the China-US trade talks that were fuelled by a report saying Beijing officials had raised doubts about the chances of a long-term deal. Investors were also spooked by a speech by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, in which he called China “truly hostile” to the US, leading Beijing to accuse the White House of “viciously” attacking it. The flare-up comes just as the two sides put the finishing touches to a mini trade pact that is seen as the first phase of a wider agreement, with top-level phone talks due to take place later yesterday. Recent signs of progress in the long-running dispute have provided some much-needed support to equity markets in recent weeks, with most markets posting some healthy gains. Wall Street, where the S&P 500 had hit a record high Wednesday, turned lower after Bloomberg News reported that Chinese officials were sceptical they would be able to reach a comprehensive long-term deal. It said they warned they would not budge on key issues, while they were also concerned about Donald Trump’s impulsiveness and were even worried about the chances of getting the current agreement finished. “The article proved a not-too-subtle reminder of how quickly trade war sentiment can pivot and highlighting those fears that we all knew about but were perhaps was too wrapped up (in) the phase one euphoria to recognise,” said AxiTrader’s Stephen Innes. “Specifically, the trust gap is the bridge too far and what’s going on behind the shiny veneer of an apparent trade detente, the thorny Hong Kong protest bill,” he added, referring to US lawmakers passing a bill defending civil rights in the financial hub. National Australia Bank’s Ray Attrill added that expectations would be low for anything past phase one being agreed ahead of the 2020 presidential election. “Yet some market participants evidently held the view that passage of phase one could quickly lead to progress on phase two next year,” he said. Also Thursday, Pompeo hit out at China’s clampdown on Hong Kong protests and its incarceration of Uighur Muslims, and said Beijing was seeking international domination. China responded by accusing the US of “arrogance and fear”. Still, after an early sell-off, Asian traders took the developments in their stride and the mood picked up through the day to give the region’s equity markets a healthy end to the week. Hong Kong rose 0.7 per cent to its highest close since mid-September as dealers brushed off a much-sharper-than-expected dive in third-quarter economic growth caused by the trade war and months of sometimes-violent protests that have hammered its tourism and retail sectors. Shanghai jumped one per cent after a private gauge of Chinese manufacturing activity showed an improvement, soothing worries about Thursday’s official reading that pointed to further contraction in the sector. Seoul added 0.8 per cent and Sydney edged up 0.1 per cent. However, Tokyo retreated 0.3 per cent, while Wellington and Jakarta were also lower. Attention now turns to the release later in the day of US jobs figures, which will give a fresh idea about the state of the US economy. They come days after the Federal Reserve cut interest rates for a third straight month but hinted it would not likely do so again this year as it assesses the growth outlook. Oil prices were flat having tumbled more than one per cent Thursday on the trade talks fears as well as another jump in US stockpiles. In early trade London rose 0.3 per cent, while Paris and Frankfurt put on 0.4 per cent.
Source – The Independent.