Kuwait Times

Oil stabilizes after big drop on IMF growth cut

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LONDON: Asian markets were marginally higher on Wednesday while oil began recovering after a downgraded IMF global growth forecast for 2022 had sent crude prices plunging. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund slashed its outlook by 0.8 percentage points, largely over inflationa­ry crises linked to the Ukraine war and the coronaviru­s pandemic-prompting a five percent dive in oil prices on Tuesday.

“The economic effects of the war are spreading far and wide-like seismic waves that emanate from the epicenter of an earthquake,” IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said in a report.

Oil prices began to recover Wednesday, however, and Asian stocks also mostly rose following a positive lead from Wall Street, where US stocks rallied on the back of promising housing-starts data and solid corporate earnings. Both main contracts climbed, but crude has suffered major shocks this year, from the war in Ukraine to the raging coronaviru­s outbreak in China, where the economy has been battered by antiCOVID restrictio­ns. Tens of millions are still barred from leaving home in economic centre Shanghai and tech hub Shenzhen, where a COVID-19 outbreak has broken down supply lines and shuttered businesses. “China continues to stay wedded to deleveragi­ng parts of the economy while attempting to add stimulus in a targeted sector manner,” said Jeffrey Haley, senior market analyst at Oanda.

“However, the Shanghai lockdown and fears its COVID-zero policy will crimp growth this year continue to weigh on markets that clearly want more of the usual cast-of-thousands stimulus measures from years past.”

Netflix shares plunge

The Shanghai Composite Index was the biggest loser among major Asian markets, dropping 1.35 percent at the close. Hong Kong-which plummeted on Tuesday over concerns about Beijing’s ongoing tech-sector crackdown-also ended down, with Chinese banks keeping lending rates unchanged.

“China disappoint­ed markets that were looking for more comprehens­ive stimulus measures as it left both its one and five-year Loan prime Rates (LPR) unchanged,” Haley said.

Tokyo gained 0.86 percent, buoyed by a cheaper yen. Jakarta, Sydney and Taipei all inched upward while Seoul was flat. Despite the rally on Wall Street, there are concerns about the impact of the earnings report from Netflix showing a drop in subscripti­ons in the first quarter of the year.

This was the first such drop for Netflix in a decade and hammered the streaming giant’s shares, which dropped by a quarter of their value in after-market trading.

Analysts have said this could dent Tuesday’s gains when US markets open. After closing lower on Tuesday over the IMF announceme­nt, Europe’s major markets opened the day in positive territory, with London, Paris and Frankfurt all slightly up.

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