Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

World equities drop after N. Korea’s latest nuclear test

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Global stock markets slid yesterday as investors sought safer bets after North Korea claimed to have tested a hydrogen bomb, one week after firing a ballistic missile over Japan.

Pyongyang on Sunday conducted its sixth nuclear test -- sparking further condemnati­on and a warning from US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis of a “massive military response” if the United States or its allies were attacked.

Asian stock markets slid along with the South Korean won currency, while the haven yen rallied as the news ramped up internatio­nal tensions. European losses were less acute.

“Fresh North Korean tensions weigh on financial markets as the probabilit­y of a serious US military response escalates,” VTB Capital analyst Neil Mackinnon told AFP.

Seoul said later yesterday there were signs the North is preparing another missile launch, adding it could involve an interconti­nental ballistic missile similar to the one fired over Japan.

US President Donald Trump stands ready to use the country’s “full range of diplomatic, convention­al and nuclear capabiliti­es” if North Korea continues to threaten it or its allies, the White House said Sunday.

Trump denounced the test, tweeting that the time for “appeasemen­t” was over and threatenin­g drastic economic sanctions, including “stopping all trade with any country doing business with North Korea”.

“It seems (North Korean leader) Kim Jong-un shows no signs of conciliati­on,” said Greg Mckenna, chief market strategist at Axitrader.

North Korea “seems hell-bent on either goading the United States, and its president, into a response or what it thinks will be an embarrassi­ng backdown”, he added.

Provocatio­n

On equity markets Seoul shed 1.2 percent and Japan’s Nikkei ended 0.9-percent down as the stronger yen hurt exporters. Hong Kong slipped 0.8 percent and Sydney closed down 0.4 percent, while Singapore gave up one percent.

“There has been a marked increase in North Korean provocatio­n in recent weeks with a series of missile tests being carried out in what is quite clearly a deliberate escalation of internatio­nal tensions,” added XTB analyst David Cheetham.

“The latest drill caused a 6.3 magnitude earthquake that shook North Korea following the detonation of the country’s strongest nuclear weapon, which was almost 10 times more powerful than the previous tests.”

Sunday’s test was of a device that could be mounted on an interconti­nental missile capable of reaching the United States, North Korea claimed.

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