Times of Eswatini

JSE in for unsure day as China rumours swirl

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JOHANNESBU­RG – The JSE is in an unpredicta­ble global markets monitor what happened in the midterm elections in the US yesterday.

Rumours continue to circulate about China easing its zero-COVID stance and new consumer inflation data from the US on Thursday to take stock of the fight against high inflation.

The Nikkei jumped 3.42 per cent, the Hang Seng was level and the Shanghai composite fell by 0.52 per cent. Year to date the Hang Seng is down 28.73 per cent, the Shanghai composite 15.70 per cent and the Nikkei 4.68 per cent.

Tencent, which influences the JSE via Naspers and Prosus, advanced 1.06 per cent yesterday morning, but has plunged 45.35 per cent so far this year.

Rumours about China’s COVID-policy stance continue to cause market volatility, despite authoritie­s denying reports.

Proceeded

“As the day (Monday) proceeded it was clear that the market was prepared to take a ‘where there’s smoke, there’s fire’ view on China’s zero-COVID policy, assuming that there probably will be some easing of restrictio­ns, even if it’s over a long period of time, enough to provide a glimmer of hope about China’s economic path through 2023,” Bank of New Zealand Senior Market Strategist Jason Wong said in a note.

Traders in Hong Kong remain wary of what might happen in mainland China, while Japanese markets were lifted by Wall Street’s gains.

In local market news, the Rand firmed on Monday to levels last seen a month ago, while the JSE pared earlier losses amid mixed global peers, with investors turning their focus to US inflation data this week.

The JSE all share gained 0.19 per cent to 69 439 points, while the top 40 was little changed. The precious metals and mining index added 0.97 per cent, financials were up 0.76 per cent, banks collected 0.69 per cent, resources firmed 0.48 per cent and industrial­s metals garnered 0.22 per cent. Industrial­s lost 0.258 per cent.

US markets closed higher on Tuesday as the Dow Jones gained 1.31 per cent, the S&P 500 0.96 per cent and the Nasdaq 0.85 per cent. The Nasdaq has lost just under one one-third (33.27 per cent) of its value so far this year, the S&P 500 over one-fifth (20.63 per cent) and the Dow Jones 10.27 per cent.

All eyes will be on the midterm elections on Tuesday where the US House of Representa­tives, about one-third of the Senate and key State governorsh­ips were up for grabs.

Equities

“Newswires are pinning the latest increases onto a pre-midterm election rally, with expected Republican gains being cited as positive for bonds and therefore for equities,” Asia-Pacific Head of Research Robert Carnell and chief China economist Min Joo Kang at the ING Group said in a note.

A good showing by the Republican­s is likely to see former President Donald Trump formally confirm another run for presidency in 2024, Wong said.

Meanwhile, traders are also waiting for the latest CPI data from the world’s largest economy tomorrow. Higher-than-expected inflation could indicate that the pivot away from hiking interest rates by the US Federal Reserve could be further away than expected. The Rand depreciate­d by 0.14 per cent against the dollar, trading at R17.75. The Rand has depreciate­d by 11.28 per cent against the greenback so far this year.

The price of commoditie­s declined. Platinum retreated 0.33 per cent to US$974.40, brent crude 0.33 per cent to US$97.56 a barrel and gold 0.28 per cent to US$1 670.52/oz.

 ?? (Courtesy pic) ?? JSE to open to mixed Asian markets as Wall Street slides further.
(Courtesy pic) JSE to open to mixed Asian markets as Wall Street slides further.

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