The Business Times

Asia: Stocks rally as better economic data trump second wave fears

Published Tue, Jun 30, 2020 · 03:29 AM

[HONG KONG] Stock markets rose in Asia on Tuesday as traders welcomed positive economic data from China and the US, which helped offset a pick-up in virus infections and the reimposition of containment measures in some countries.

The easing of lockdowns in recent months has been a key catalyst for world equities as investors -- supported by a wall of government and central bank cash -- bet on a sharp recovery from what is expected to be a global recession this year.

Wall Street provided a healthy lead, helped by news of a record 44-percent on-month jump in US pending home sales in June, as well as a massive improvement in manufacturing activity as reported by the Dallas Federal Reserve.

On Tuesday, China said its purchasing managers index (PMI) of factory activity improved on May and beat forecasts, while the non-manufacturing reading was also better than hoped.

The readings from the world's top two economies provided some much-needed hope to investors that a rebound is stirring, helped by the reopening of businesses around the world, led by Europe.

Fed boss Jerome Powell lifted the mood with comments on the economic recovery as he said consumer spending had seen a big jump in May and the US economy had "entered an important new phase sooner than expected", though he warned the recovery was dependent on keeping the virus in check.

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Tokyo ended the morning 1.8 per cent higher, while Hong Kong rose 0.8 per cent and Shanghai added 0.4 per cent.

Sydney, Seoul and Wellington were all up more than one per cent, with Singapore 0.9 per cent higher and Manila and Jakarta up 0.5 per cent apiece.

"Worries about second-wave states appear now to be last week's news, so it seems, as investors turn focus to the robust reopening narrative," said AxiCorp's Stephen Innes.

HONG KONG NERVES

However, there remains a lot of uncertainty on trading floors owing to a spike in new cases in the US, which has led to the reclosure of bars in Los Angeles and the reimposition of measures to fight the disease elsewhere.

Germany, while pressing ahead with easing moves, has also been forced to lock down some districts, while there are also strict measures in place in parts of Beijing.

And World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus pressed home the long fight ahead for the world, saying "the hard reality is this is not even close to being over", adding that "although many countries have made some progress, globally the pandemic is actually speeding up".

In Hong Kong, traders were keeping a nervous eye on Wednesday's anniversary of the handover to China, fearing fresh clashes as Beijing reportedly passed a controversial security law banning subversion, secession and terrorism that critics fear will demolish the business hub's cherished political freedoms.

On Monday, the While House ended sensitive defence exports to Hong Kong, while the Commerce Department simultaneously said it was revoking its special status for Hong Kong.

It will now treat the financial hub the same as China for so-called dual-use exports that have both military and civilian applications - and which are highly restricted when sought by Beijing.

AFP

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