The Pak Banker

Stocks, crude take a hammering after Trump´s Europe ban

- HONG KONG -AFP

US President Donald Trump's decision to enforce a ban on travel from Europe to the US for a month to curtail the spread of coronaviru­s sent shock waves once again to the equity and oil markets sparking fears of a global recession.

As the disease showed no signs of abating, claiming more lives and infecting more people around the world, the US president said in a rare address to the nation that the ban would be in place for 30 days.

The news came after the World Health Organisati­on officially labelled the outbreak a pandemic and hit out at "alarming levels of inaction" for its spread.

Asian equity markets, already deep in the red in reaction to the WHO announceme­nt, cratered after Trump's address.

Tokyo ended down 4.4%, while Sydney lost 7.4% in the ASX 200's worst day since the 2008 financial crisis. Hong Kong fell 3.5% in the afternoon while Shanghai was off 1.6%.

Seoul, Singapore and Jakarta each lost more than 3%, while Mumbai tanked more than 7% and Bangkok more than 8%.

Manila was almost 6% down, Wellington lost 5% and Taipei retreated 4.3%.

The Japanese yen, a key haven in times of crisis and economic turmoil, jumped more than 1% against the dollar. "Travel restrictio­ns equal slower global economic activity, so if you need any more coaxing to sell... after a massively negative signal from trading in US markets it just fell in your lap," said AxiCorp's Stephen Innes.

The losses followed another brutal session on Wall Street, with wave after wave of bad news, including Hilton withdrawin­g its earnings forecast and Boeing saying it would suspend most hiring and overtime pay. The Dow fell into a bear market having lost more than 20% since its recent high, and futures pointed Thursday to another rout in New York and Europe.

The coronaviru­s outbreak has left virtually no sector untouched, though travel and tourism have been particular­ly hard-hit as countries institute travel bans and quarantine requiremen­ts, with Italy in a country-wide lockdown.

The number of cases across the globe has risen to more than 124,000 with 4,500 deaths, including a jump in fatalities particular­ly in Iran and Italy, according to an AFP tally.

In announcing the Europe ban — which excludes Britain — Trump said the continent had seen a surge in new cases because government­s failed to stop travel from China, where the COVID-19 epidemic began.

He said the prohibitio­ns would also "apply to the tremendous amount of trade and cargo," and "various other things as we get approval".

However, the White House afterwards clarified that "the people transporti­ng goods will not be admitted into the country, but the goods will be".

'Crying out response'

Oil prices were also hammered, with both main contracts falling around 6% at one point before edging back slightly. The oil market was already under pressure after Saudi Arabia and Gulf partner UAE stepped up a price war with plans to flood the global markets.

"We are now staring at the whole world going into a lockdown," Vandana Hari, of Vanda Insights, said. "Oil demand can be expected to crash through the floor and all previous projection­s on oil consumptio­n are now out the door."

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