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MILLTRUST INTERNATIONAL
 

Hong Kong stocks plunge at reopen even as Asia markets bounce

January 29, 2020

BY Alexander Kalis
GROUP MANAGING DIRECTOR

Among the worst-hit sectors on global trading floors are firms linked to travel and tourism, as big-spending Chinese tourists stay at home with Beijing clamping down on people’s movement.

AFP | PTI  |  Hong Kong  Last Updated at January 29, 2020 09:42 IST

Hong Kong stocks plunged Wednesday as investors in the city returned from their Lunar New Year break to a global panic over the deadly coronavirus, though most other Asian markets were lifted by bargain-buying after recent losses.

Healthy US data reinforced hopes for the global economic outlook and supported a rally across US and European markets, which provided a strong lead for Asia, while a record earnings report from Apple also helped the mood.

Still, the focus remains on developments in the virus outbreak — which has now killed at least 132 people and infected more people in China than SARS did 17 years ago — and concerns about the impact on the world economy.

Among the worst-hit sectors on global trading floors are firms linked to travel and tourism, as big-spending Chinese tourists stay at home with Beijing clamping down on people’s movement.

The outbreak carries echoes of the SARS crisis, which paralysed regional travel and battered local economies. Chinese tourist numbers then fell by around a third.

The latest outbreak is expected to deal a massive blow to China’s already-fragile economy, coming during the Lunar New Year holidays when millions criss-cross the country and spend billions of dollars. It also comes just as data indicated some sort of stability in the economy after a long-running slowdown.

“We expected to see strong economic momentum in China before, but now the pace of growth may slow,” Banny Lam, at CEB International Investment, said.

Markets will remain very volatile due to the uncertainty, and the swings won’t subside until we have clear evidence that the virus is fading. That may happen when the weather gets warmer in the summer.”

Hong Kong fell 2.6 per cent as stocks dropped across the board, with airline Cathay Pacific losing more than three per cent, casino operator Galaxy Entertainment diving more than six per cent and property giant New World Development off more than four per cent.

However, markets elsewhere in the region enjoyed a bounce with Tokyo up 0.5 per cent by the break, Sydney adding 0.6 per cent, Seoul climbing 0.5 per cent and Jakarta 0.4 per cent higher.

Singapore and Wellington were also up. Mainland markets’ Lunar New Year break, which was due to end Thursday, has been extended until Monday.

Investors were given some cheer by figures from Washington showing healthy consumer activity, a pick-up in consumer confidence and a recovery in the key manufacturing sector. The readings support recent optimism that the world economy is stirring.

“We are seeing economic data points that support this continued recovery,” Susan Schmidt, a fund manager at Aviva Investors, told Bloomberg TV.

“The coronavirus might have tamped that down just a bit, but overall management teams are coming back and giving a pretty positive outlook and feeling confident about their businesses.”

Next up is the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting later in the day, which is expected to see it keep interest rates on hold, though its comments on the impact of the virus will be closely followed.

The upbeat mood helped higher-yielding, riskier currencies rise against the dollar, with the Mexican peso, Chinese yuan and Australian dollar making inroads.

Oil was also higher, with OANDA’s Edward Moya saying in a note that coronavirus fears have scaled back slightly, while a drop in US stockpiles also provided a boost.

“Prices are recovering, and we could see this rebound continue as supply risks remain in Libya and as US production shows signs of slowing down,” he said.

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