The Borneo Post (Sabah)

HSBC shares hit 25year low on report of China ‘unreliable list’

-

HONG KONG: Most Asian markets fell yesterday following another disappoint­ing performanc­e on Wall Street with investors growing concerned about an uptick in Coronaviru­s Disease 2019 (Covid-19) infections in Europe and the US, as well as the lack of movement in Washington on a new stimulus.

After months of big gains around the world, fuelled by government stimulus and central bank largesse, equities are beginning to wobble, with analysts warning traders were taking profits as they consider the rally may have been overblown.

A key worry is a spike in new virus cases in key economies that have led to containmen­t measures being reimposed.

Britain’s government, noting hospitalis­ation rates are doubling every eight days, said fresh restrictio­ns could be put in place across England, with several cities already seeing some measures.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the country was at a “tipping point”.

France has seen death numbers creep back up and there are fears Madrid could be overwhelme­d. New infection rates in the United States are also picking up again after dropping for weeks.

“Investors remain confused about which way to move... as lockdown fears take charge with the UK government sounding alarm bells as the Covid-19 curve moves in the wrong direction,” said AxiCorp’s Stephen Innes.

“After the initial economic bounce from full-blown lockdowns, both the UK and Europe’s economic trajectory could be entering a gloomy second phase characteri­sed by ongoing social distancing, elevated unemployme­nt, and increasing damage to the supply side.”

Hong Kong led losses, dropping 1.5 per cent with market heavyweigh­t HSBC tumbling around four per cent to a 25-year low on fears it could be added to a Chinese list of firms deemed a threat to national security and following news it had been accused of allowing fraudulent activity to go unpunished.

Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul,

Investors remain confused about which way to move ... as lockdown fears take charge with the UK government sounding alarm bells as the Covid19 curve moves in the wrong direction.

Stephen Innes

Taipei, Wellington and Jakarta were also well down, with smaller losses in Singapore, though Manila, Mumbai and Bangkok were marginally higher.

London, Paris and Frankfurt all fell in the first few minutes.

Investors are keeping an eye on Capitol Hill where US lawmakers are still nowhere near agreeing on a new rescue package for the beleaguere­d economy, despite millions of Americans struggling to make ends meet.

While Donald Trump has urged Republican­s to lift their US$500 billion offer, they remain miles apart from the Democrats, who are calling for around US$2 trillion to be spent.

Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell has warned that while the central bank can keep interest rates low and provide financial support to businesses, the economy needs a new shot in the arm from Congress to get its recovery back on track.

“Elevated equity valuation probably also means that investors have become a bit more sensitive to uncertaint­y,” said National Australia Bank’s Rodrigo Catril.

“So on this score we have to add the US elections early in November, plus the Fed’s decision to refrain from increasing its bond buying at the September FOMC meeting... and the continued stalemate in negotiatio­ns over a new fiscal package.” — AFP

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Most Asian markets fell following another disappoint­ing performanc­e on Wall Street with investors growing concerned about an uptick in Covid-19 infections in Europe and the US, as well as the lack of movement in Washington on a new stimulus. — AFP photo
Most Asian markets fell following another disappoint­ing performanc­e on Wall Street with investors growing concerned about an uptick in Covid-19 infections in Europe and the US, as well as the lack of movement in Washington on a new stimulus. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia