Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Global markets come down with virus

Investors worldwide rush to dump equities, flock to safer havens as coronaviru­s spreads

- Nasrin Sultana and Bloomberg nasrin.s@livemint.com ■

MUMBAI/HONGKONG/WASHINGTON: A glimmer of hope for recovery in global growth this year after the US and China reached a temporary truce in their trade war seems likely to be derailed as the deadly coronaviru­s quickly spread to 19 countries and now threatens to escalate further.

Investors around the world rushed to dump equities and flocked to safer havens, fearing that the coronaviru­s could slow down global growth.

The outbreak that began in the central Chinese city of Wuhan has killed 107 people in China and infected more than 4,500 globally. The World Health Organizati­on called the outbreak an emergency for China, but stopped short of designatin­g it a global emergency.

“The Wuhan coronaviru­s poses a significan­t downside risk to the near-term Asia-Pacific economic outlook in 2020 if the epidemic continues to escalate in coming weeks,” Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Markit, wrote in a recent report to clients. “The extent and duration of this negative shock to regional economic growth will depend on how quickly the Wuhan virus epidemic can be brought under control.”

The MSCI World index, which captures large and mid-cap representa­tion across 23 developed markets, has fallen 1.3% in the past 10 days. The sell-off has been sharper in the MSCI Emerging Markets index, which shed 3.57%, while India’s benchmark Sensex lost nearly 2% during the period. On Tuesday, the Sensex fell 0.46% to 40,966.86 points.

According to analysts, investors in India have reacted to the concerns related to coronaviru­s as well as worries about fiscal slippages.

“Though Indian markets have declined in tandem with global peers, Union budget will steer equities ahead. Any unfavourab­le announceme­nt in the budget may deter sentiment and result in some sell-off,” said an analyst on condition of anonymity.

Companies including Honda Motor Co. Ltd and Nissan Motor Co. Ltd are evacuating workers from the affected area, while theme park operators, movie theatres, retailers and restaurant chains are suspending or curtailing operations to protect workers.

While it is too early to assess the full impact on China, where national holidays have been extended and the central city of Wuhan has been locked down, it is clear the virus is hurting consumptio­n and tourism. The city of 11 million has been locked down in a bid to stem the spread of the virus, leaving roads empty and millions of people isolated and idle. Economists are still running the numbers on how that will hurt economic growth. Many are benchmarki­ng the spread and severity of the coronaviru­s against the SARS (Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome) outbreak in early 2003.

During the SARS crisis, close to 800 people in 17 countries died of the previously unknown respirator­y illness that originated in southern China.

During SARS, Asia-Pacific airlines lost 39 billion revenue passenger kilometres or around 8% of annual traffic in 2003, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA). Global cost from SARS was estimated at $33 billion, or 0.1% of world GDP in 2003.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Airlines and passengers are on guard against the respirator­y coronaviru­s that originated in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, so far killing
■ more than 100 people in China and spreading to more than 10 countries.
REUTERS Airlines and passengers are on guard against the respirator­y coronaviru­s that originated in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, so far killing ■ more than 100 people in China and spreading to more than 10 countries.

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