Gulf News

Asian markets tank over new US-China spat.

HUAWEI TOP EXECUTIVE’S ARREST HAS COME AT THE WORST POSSIBLE TIME FOR STOCKS

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The sea of red that’s engulfing Asian stocks is enough to sap the hopes of even the most optimistic traders. The regional gauge fell 1.8 per cent for its biggest daily plunge in six weeks, as markets from Tokyo to Hong Kong and Mumbai sank. In just three days, the rally seen last week in anticipati­on of presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping’s trade discussion­s has more than vanished, with Asian equity values taking their losses from a January high to $6.2 trillion (Dh22.7 trillion).

Yesterday, it was the ripple effects of the arrest of Huawei Technologi­es Co.’s chief financial officer that hit the market. Wanzhou Meng — also the deputy chairwoman and daughter of the company’s founder — was arrested in Canada over potential violations of US sanctions on Iran, provoking outrage from China and spooking Asian traders.

“We’ve already had the trade issue, and now there is another place on fire,” said Steven Leung, executive director at UOB Kay Hian Ltd. “Earlier, the market still had some optimistic thoughts that there will be a short cool-down period from the trade war, but now that’s gone.”

Cautious calls

Losses in Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index reached 3 per cent at one point, more than anywhere else in the region. In addition to the Huawei hit, business groups in the city are starting to worry the Trump administra­tion will open the door to ending the financial hub’s preferenti­al trade status, rendering it “just another Chinese city” as its government gets closer to Beijing.

It didn’t help that US equityinde­x futures sank yesterday, with contracts on the S&P 500 Index plunging as much as 1.9 per cent from the close on December 4. And with Opec+ failing to agree on details of oilproduct­ion cuts, energy shares in Asia got another hit.

As a result, investors have turned to haven assets: the yen strengthen­ed, knocking down Japan’s Topix index by as much as 2.5 per cent and sending it to a five-week low.

And the cautious calls have accumulate­d recently.

 ?? AFP ?? An index indicator shows the Tokyo Stock Exchange index yesterday. Losses in the Hong Kong index reached 3 per cent at one point.
AFP An index indicator shows the Tokyo Stock Exchange index yesterday. Losses in the Hong Kong index reached 3 per cent at one point.

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