Business

Asia stock markets sink on mounting trade war fears

Asia stock markets sink on mounting trade war fears

August 02, 2018 | 08:59 PM
Pedestrians walk past a stock indicator showing share prices of the Tokyo Stock Exchange. Tokyo stocks slipped 1% to 22,512.53 points yesterday tracking drops on Wall Street as Washington threatened to raise tariffs on Chinese goods.
Asian markets sank yesterday on mounting trade war fears after the US warned it was looking at more than doubling threatened tariffs on a range of Chinese imports.Shanghai and Hong Kong led losses after Donald Trump’s Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer confirmed earlier reports that the White House was considering hiking levies to 25% from the announced 10% on $200bn of Chinese goods.“We have been very clear about the specific changes China should undertake.Regrettably, instead of changing its harmful behaviour, China has illegally retaliated against US workers, farmers, ranchers and businesses,” Lighthizer said.His statement comes after separate reports said the two sides were looking to restart talks to avert a trade war between the world’s top two economies that could hammer global growth.In response to earlier reports that the US was considering the move, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang warned Wednesday that “blackmail and pressure from the US side will never work on China”.Separately, Washington has already imposed tariffs on $34bn worth of goods and is considering hitting another $16bn in the coming weeks.Investors are left guessing about how the crisis will play out, with some worrying that with both sides digging in there could be more pain down the line, but others saying Trump is playing tough as a negotiating tactic.“Markets are now wary of the next step in the trade war between the US and China,” Nick Twidale, chief operating officer at Rakuten Securities Australia, said in a note.“With the US threatening to increase tariffs to 25% from 10% and the Chinese vowing not to react to ‘blackmail’ to get them back to the negotiating table, this could be the catalyst that tips sentiment and some markets into a tailspin to the downside, especially as we enter the lower liquidity holiday trading season.”Shanghai finished down 2% at 2,768.02 and Hong Kong lost 2.2% at 27,714.56, while Seoul slipped 1.6%.Tokyo retreated 1% at 22,512.53 and Sydney eased 0.6%.Taipei shed 1.5% while Singapore was also more than 1% off.On currency markets, the pound was virtually unchanged against the dollar ahead of a Bank of England policy meeting at which it is expected to lift interest rates to their highest level for nine years as it looks to fend off rising inflation.But the dollar weakened against the yen despite the Federal Reserve on Wednesday indicating it would hike borrowing costs next month, with the Japanese unit supported by the central bank’s lighter touch to monetary policy.Oil prices rebounded slightly after falling sharply Wednesday in response to a jump in US crude stockpiles and reports that output by Opec and Russia increased in July.
August 02, 2018 | 08:59 PM