Asian markets retreat as trade tensions ratchet back up

0
111


Asian markets slipped in early trading Wednesday amid growing pessimism over U.S.-China trade talks scheduled later this week.

Late Monday, the U.S. blacklisted 28 Chinese companies, including artificial-intelligence companies because of their alleged role in human-rights violations against the Uighur Muslim minority. And Tuesday, the U.S. announced visa restrictions against Chinese officials believed involved in abuses if Uighurs. Bloomberg News also reported the Trump administration may move to cap the flow of U.S. capital into Chinese companies.

In response, China’s Commerce Ministry issued a statement saying the U.S. should “stop interfering” in its internal affairs. “China will also take all necessary measures to resolutely safeguard China’s own interests,” a Commerce Ministry spokesperson said, according to CNBC.

“With the recent U.S. trade war escalation headlines . . . it suggests from President Trump’s perspective that at this stage of the election process a trade deal this week, will not offer up a significant enough policy victory that he needs to bolster his polling numbers against the gale-force economic and political headwinds he’s facing stateside,” Stephen Innes, Asia-Pacific market strategist at AxiTrader, wrote in a note. “So, it’s back on the trade-war offensive. Frankly, it’s incredible how my times the markets get sucked back into the trade-war calm only to end up back in trade-war purgatory.”

Japan’s Nikkei












NIK, -0.66%










  fell 0.7% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index












HSI, -0.68%










  retreated 0.2%. The Shanghai Composite












SHCOMP, +0.02%










  inched up slightly, while the smaller-cap Shenzhen Composite












399106, -0.02%










  was about flat. Benchmark indexes in Taiwan












Y9999, -1.00%










 , Singapore












STI, -0.59%










 , Malaysia












FBMKLCI, -0.55%










  and Indonesia












JAKIDX, -0.27%










  were largely down. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200












XJO, -0.71%










  fell 0.8%. South Korea’s Kospi was closed for a holiday.

Among individual stocks, SoftBank












9984, -0.88%










  fell in Tokyo trading, along with oil producer Inpex












1605, -2.24%










  and e-commerce company Rakuten












4755, -2.39%










 . In Hong Kong, Hang Seng Bank












11, -3.27%










  fell, as did Apple component maker Sunny Optical












2382, -2.40%










  and casino operator Galaxy Entertainment












27, -1.45%










 . Foxconn












2354, -2.33%










 declined in Taiwan and in Australia, Beach Energy












BPT, -2.44%










  and BHP












BHP, -1.35%










  fell.



Source : MTV