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Hong Kong and Shanghai lead a surge across Asia markets

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Hong Kong and Shanghai led a surge across Asian markets yesterday after the United States agreed to suspend imposing tariffs on China for three months, while oil prices soared on expectatio­ns of a big production cut.

In a much-anticipate­d meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping at the weekend, the heads of the world’s two biggest economies hammered out a deal that will see them hold off on their tit-for-tat tariffs row, which has roiled global equities for most of the year.

The US will hold off raising levies on Chinese goods on January 1 while China promised to buy more from the US and enter a 90-day period of talks to bring an end to the dispute.

If the negotiatio­ns, fail tariffs will jump from 10% now to 25%. Trump hailed the meeting — held on the sidelines of the G20 in Buenos Aires — as “amazing and productive...with unlimited possibilit­ies for both the United States and China”. The news lit a fuse under Asian markets, with Hong Kong and Shanghai each rallying more than 2%, while the Chinese yuan, which has tumbled this year on worries about the trade row, jumped.

Tokyo climbed 1.4% by the break, Sydney and Seoul each rose 1.6%, Singapore was 1.9% higher and Taipei piled on 2%.

“This is the best outcome that we had hoped for out of this meeting,” said Frances Cheung, head of Asia macro strategy at Westpac Banking Corp.

However, while the early reaction was positive, observers warned there were still major issues that need to be resolved.

The “imposition of no new tariffs is not the same as retracing the existing tariffs that have come into play this year and will gradually have an impact on the US economy”, said Kerry Craig, global market strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management. “Moreover, the ideology behind the trade tensions is still about strategic positionin­g of the two economies, which means until issues around technology transfer and (intellectu­al property) are resolved, nerves will persist.

“We anticipate that things are still likely to get worse before they get better, and that the negative sentiment impact created by the trade narrative will create additional market volatility.”

The news also provided a boost to oil prices, which have been battered by concerns the trade war would hit demand for the commodity.

Adding to the buying support was President Vladimir Putin saying Saturday that Russia and Saudi Arabia had agreed to renew a pact on production cuts.

Both main contracts climbed more than 4%, which provided a boost to regional energy firms with PetroChina up more than 3% in Hong Kong and Woodside Petroleum up a similar amount in Sydney.

Traders are now looking ahead to a weekend meeting of Opec and key non-Opec members, where they will make an announceme­nt on how much they will cut and for how long.

“It’s a huge week not only for oil markets but capital markets in general,” said Stephen Innes, head of AsiaPacifi­c trade at OANDA.

“Post-G20 sentiment is a bit more positive than expected but still very much work in progress, so perhaps the most crucial event in December next to (Britain’s) Brexit vote could very well be the Opec summit.”

The upbeat sentiment sent higheryiel­ding and emerging market currencies higher against the dollar.

The Mexican peso was more than 1% higher, South Korea’s won jumped 0.5%, the South African rand climbed 0.8% and the Australian dollar put on 0.8%.

In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 closed up 1.4% at 22,665.97 points; Hong Kong — Hang Seng ended up 2.6% to 27,185.66 points and Shanghai — Composite closed up 2.3% to 2,647.13 points yesterday.

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