Business World

Asian stocks slump to 14-month low on China woes

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A SELL-OFF in Chinese shares pulled Asian equities to a 14-month trough on Monday as investors braced for a potentiall­y damaging escalation in the Sino-US tariff row after US President Donald Trump raised the stakes in the dispute with Beijing.

SYDNEY — A sell-off in Chinese shares pulled Asian equities to a 14-month trough on Monday as investors braced for a potentiall­y damaging escalation in the SinoUS tariff row after US President Donald Trump raised the stakes in the dispute with Beijing.

MSCI’s broadest index of AsiaPacifi­c shares outside Japan skidded 0.9% to the lowest since July 2017, extending losses from last week when it dropped 3.5% for its worst weekly showing since mid-March.

In Europe, however, spreadbett­ers are pointing to a slightly more positive start with the focus on Sweden’s election results with the country headed for a hung parliament.

Futures for Eurostoxx 50, Germany’s Dax and London’s FTSE were modestly higher while EMinis for the S&P 500 were a bit stronger too.

Asian investors were jittery after Mr. Trump said on Friday he was ready to slap tariffs on virtually all Chinese imports into the United States, threatenin­g duties on another $267 billion of goods in addition to the $200 billion already facing the risk of duties.

Beijing has warned of retaliatio­n if Washington launches any new measures, but it is running out of room to match them dollar-for-dollar, raising concerns it could resort to other measures such as weakening the yuan or taking action against US companies in China.

Chinese shares were battered with the blue-chip index off 1.4% while Shanghai’s SSE Composite stumbled 1.2%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index slipped 1.3%.

Japan’s Nikkei, which had opened lower, ended 0.3% higher after revised second-quarter gross domestic product data showed the world’s third-biggest economy grew at its fastest pace since 2016.

Mr. Trump, who is challengin­g China, Mexico, Canada and the European Union on trade issues, has now expressed displeasur­e about his country’s large trade deficit with Japan.

Investors are also on the edge about any contagion risks from turmoil in some emerging markets (EM) including Argentina and Turkey whose currencies have been routed recently.

Some Asian economies too are vulnerable, Nomura analysts said in a lengthy report with many countries burdened with high private debt. They also noted a “concentrat­ion risk” from some of the world’s largest funds’ heavy investment­s in EM assets.

The Indian rupee hit a record low of 72.50 per dollar on while Indonesia’s rupiah — the region’s second worst performer this year — weakened 0.4%, hovering near an all time trough.

“Given the latest comments from Trump, investors are likely to see the potential for further depreciati­on in EM currencies with the trade war cranking up yet another notch,” said Nick Twidale, Sydney-based analyst at Rakuten Securities Australia. “Many EMs have broken ranges to trade at historical­ly weak levels and investors will continue to monitor the sector closely with contagion fears still a major concern.”

Another factor weighing on global markets is the prospect of faster rate hikes by the Federal Reserve after data on Friday showed US job growth accelerate­d in August and wages notched their largest annual increase in more than nine years. The Fed is all but certain to raise rates a third time this year in late September. —

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