Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Asian markets end week on a high as China-us trade hopes rise

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HONG KONG (AFP) - Asian markets rallied yesterday as another broadly positive week drew to a close, with investors cheered by a report that the US was considerin­g lifting tariffs on China as officials look to hammer out a trade deal.

Optimism that the world’s top two economies are on course to reach a deal ending their long-running trade row has helped boost equities across the world this year.

And while news that the US was carrying out a criminal probe into Chinese tech giant Huawei caused a wobble Thursday, the rally resumed after the Wall Street Journal story on tariff-lifting broke.

The paper reported Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had raised the idea with Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer of removing some or all levies on Beijing in return for structural reforms.

It said the move was part of a bid to reassure markets and bolster the odds of a bigger trade deal, ending a monthslong saga that is beginning to impact economies around the world, particular­ly China.

However, the Treasury Department told AFP that no formal recommenda­tion had been made by either Mnuchin or Lighthizer in the talks, which were “nowhere near completion”. Still, investors remained upbeat.

Hong Kong rose 1.3 percent and Shanghai ended 1.4 percent higher while Tokyo jumped 1.3 percent.

Sydney added 0.5 percent, Seoul gained 0.2 percent and Singapore put on 0.8 percent, while there were also advances in Wellington, Taipei and Manila.

In early trade London and Paris each put on 0.6 percent and Frankfurt was 0.7 percent higher.

“The US government has said that there have been no formal talks to scale back tariffs, but the market saw the half glass full as the reports signal that concession­s are in the works,” said Alfonso Esparza, senior market analyst at OANDA.

However, there was scepticism among analysts, with the two sides still far apart on a number of issues, particular­ly regarding intellectu­al property.

“Certainly evidence that the administra­tion is approachin­g a deal would be good news,” Laura Rosner, senior economist at Macropolic­y Perspectiv­es, said. “We’ve heard noise around trade policy before though, so I would want to make sure the progress happens and sticks.

On currency markets the pound edged up and was sitting around two-month highs against the dollar as dealers bet that Britain will not leave the European Union without a deal.

After her grand Brexit plan was soundly rebuffed by MPS this week, British Prime Minister Theresa May has called cross-party talks to put together a “Plan B” with a more palatable agreement by Monday.

Still, if that does not work, there is a growing expectatio­n that the March 29 exit deadline will be pushed back to give May more time to reach another deal or possibly call another referendum.

“For the most part the (pound’s) move higher appears to be more in hope than expectatio­n, given the default position as it stands now remains that the UK leaves the EU without a deal,” said Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK.

Oil prices rose on the China-us tariffs report and after OPEC said it had cut output in December before a new agreement to limit supply took effect.

Both main contracts are up around a fifth since the end of December, thanks to an agreement to cut output by OPEC and other key producers including Russia. That followed almost three months of losses that wiped around 40 percent off prices that was fuelled by supply and demand worries.

And while the commodity is on the up, there are still concerns about the impact of a slowing global economy.

“As global growth stalls so does the appetite for crude,” said Esparza at OANDA. “Demand remains the biggest uncertaint­y. Positive trade headlines could boost energy prices as supply remains a tug-o-war between rising (US) shale production and OPEC agreed limits.

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