Asian markets pull back as trade tensions resurface

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Asian markets slipped in early trading Wednesday as trade tensions between the U.S. and China rose to the forefront again.

Following reports Monday that trade negotiations could resume soon, President Donald Trump threw water on investors’ optimism Tuesday, saying “We have a long way to go” before any deal. Trump added that he could impose tariffs on another $325 billion of Chinese imports if he wants to.

Separately, amid reports that the Trump administration may soon allow some U.S. companies to resume business with Chinese tech giant Huawei Technologies Co., bipartisan legislation was introduced in the Senate that would block Huawei from being removed from the government’s blacklist without congressional approval.

Japan’s Nikkei












NIK, -0.32%










  retreated 0.4%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index












HSI, -0.34%










  slid 0.3%. The Shanghai Composite












SHCOMP, -0.08%










  edged down 0.2%. South Korea’s Kospi












180721, -1.02%










  fell 0.9%, and benchmark indexes in Taiwan












Y9999, -0.41%










 , Singapore












STI, -0.08%










  and Indonesia












JAKIDX, -0.31%










  all declined. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200












XJO, +0.43%










  was one of the region’s few gainers, rising 0.4%.

Among individual stocks, SoftBank












9984, -2.47%










  fell in Tokyo trading, along with Fast Retailing












9983, -0.52%










  and Nintendo












7974, -0.87%










 . In Hong Kong, Geely Automobile












175, +3.88%










  rose, while oil producer CNOOC












883, -2.24%










  and food processor WH Group












288, -1.13%










  declined. Samsung












005930, -1.49%










  dropped in South Korea and Taiwan Semiconductor












2330, -0.98%










  fell in Taiwan. In Australia, BHP












BHP, +1.17%










  and Beach Energy












BPT, +1.17%










  gained while Oil Search












OSH, -3.27%










  fell.

“President Trump’s renewed threat of more tariffs on Chinese goods has investors bracing for weak trading in the Asian session today, tracking the negative sentiment in the U.S. overnight,” ING economists Nicholas Mapa and Prakash Sakpal said in their report.

The S&P 500












SPX, -0.34%










  fell 10.26 points, or 0.3%, to 3,004.04. That marks the first decline in the benchmark index after five days of gains. The Dow Jones Industrial Average












DJIA, -0.09%










  fell 23.53 points, or 0.1% to 27,335.63. The Nasdaq composite












COMP, -0.43%










  fell 35.39 points, or 0.4%, to 8,222.80.

The latest round of U.S. corporate financial reports ramps up this week and investors have low expectations. Wall Street is forecasting a 2.6% drop in profit for S&P 500 companies. It is set to be the first back-to-back quarterly decline in three years.

Also highly anticipated is the Federal Reserve meeting at the end of the month. Wall Street expects the central bank to raise interest rates to help secure U.S. economic growth threatened by a trade war with China.

Benchmark U.S. crude












CLQ19, -0.05%










  added 2 cents to $57.64 a barrel. It fell $1.96 to settle at $57.62 per barrel Tuesday. Brent crude












BRNU19, +0.17%










 , the international standard, rose 21 cents to $64.56 a barrel.

The dollar












USDJPY, -0.03%










  rose to 108.16 Japanese yen from 107.98 late Tuesday.



Source : MTV