The Phnom Penh Post

Asian markets retreat as protests batter Hong Kong

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ASIAN markets fell on Wednesday after two days of healthy gains, with Hong Kong the worst performer – sinking two per cent as a huge anti-government protest paralysed key roads in the city before turning violent.

Profit takers moved in while investors keep a nervous eye on developmen­ts in the China-US trade saga and an expected meeting between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Japan this month.

The US president repeated on Tuesday that he expects to hold a face-to-face meeting with his Chinese counterpar­t on Osaka and said Beijing wanted a deal “very badly”.

US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross tempered expectatio­ns the leaders would reach an agreement by saying the meeting could lead to progress but not a “definitive agreement”. However, he said he was confident an agreement would be reached eventually.

The comments out of Washington were keeping traders on edge, though a broad narrative of central bank easing – with the US Federal Reserve tipped to begin cutting interest rates and the EU sticking to a softer outlook – is providing muchneeded support.

“While there was only a sliver of hope a deal would get done before the G20, [Trump’s] comments hardly suggest he’s heading to Osaka in the most agreeable spirits,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner at Vanguard Markets.

“Investors are clinging on to hope, buttressed by significan­t central bank backstops, that the G20 can somehow pull a rabbit out of the hat and as such don’t want to be caught short if the event produces a [trade] deal.”

Tok yo shed 0.4 per cent, Singapore down 0.4 per cent a nd Welling ton 0.1 per cent off. Mumbai and Jakarta were also well down, while Sydney was marginally off.

Oil prices tumble

Shanghai closed 0.6 per cent lower, while Hong Kong sank 1.7 per cent as the city was rocked by violent protests by tens of thousands of people against government plans for a controvers­ial extraditio­n law.

Major thoroughfa­res were blocked by the protests as lawmakers prepared to debate the bill, which would allow extraditio­ns to China and that many fear will hammer Hong Kong’s reputation as an internatio­nal business hub. The debate was eventually postponed.

“Uncertaint­y on local policies will confuse investors and affect the flows in and out of Hong Kong stocks,” Ronald Wan, CEO of Partners Capital Internatio­nal, told Bloomberg News.

“Investors now need to ponder whether or not to pull out of the market given the local events and global factors including the trade war.”

The Hong Kong dollar strengthen­ed as the rate banks charge each other to borrow cash – known as the Hong Kong Interbank Borrowing Rate (Hibor) – rose to its highest since 2008 as lenders pulled cash out of the financial system. The rate has been rising for days.

Some observers suggested the increase in Hibor could be down to concerns about fund outflows from the city, though others suggested the money was being used to pay dividends or to meet seasonal demand, which often happens in June. Alibaba’s flagged initial public offering has also been tipped to suck up liquidity, experts said.

On oil markets both main contracts sank nearly two per cent after US data pointed to a jump in US stockpiles, exacerbati­ng worries about oversupply and weakening demand.

“Oil prices have st r uggled to retain bullish gains as traders stay cautious over heightened geopol it ica l r isk s a nd persistent wea k ness i n t he globa l economic backdrop,” said Benjamin Lu, commodit i e s a na l y s t w i t h Ph i l l i p Futures in Singapore.

Lu and other analysts said oil prices are getting support from expectatio­ns that Opec and Russia would agree to extend output cuts beyond June during a meeting later this month.

In early trade London fell 0.3 per cent, Paris eased 0.5 per cent and Frankfurt was 0.4 per cent lower.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? French tourists to Cambodia numbered 59,401, up five per cent compared to the same period last year, at 56,559.
HONG MENEA French tourists to Cambodia numbered 59,401, up five per cent compared to the same period last year, at 56,559.
 ?? AFP ?? Thousands of protesters blocked entry to Hong Kong’s government headquarte­rs on Wednesday.
AFP Thousands of protesters blocked entry to Hong Kong’s government headquarte­rs on Wednesday.

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