Most Asian markets end higher, but Trump throws stimulus grenade

Sculptures stand outside the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The Hang Seng closed up 0.9% to 26,343.10 points yesterday. 

AFP /Hong Kong: Asian markets mostly rose on Wednesday following two days of selling, while investors appeared initially unfussed after US President Donald Trump called a new stimulus package “a disgrace” and told lawmakers to amend it.
Equities and oil prices took a hit as virus cases surged across the planet and a new more transmissible strain was reported in the UK, forcing governments to impose tight restrictions and lockdowns to contain the disease over the festive period.
The worrying spike in infections has overshadowed the rollout of vaccines and news at the start of the week that Congress had finally hammered out an economic rescue package worth around $900bn.
“So much of the good news of the vaccine had been already digested and even the stimulus bill that people had largely anticipated,” Joanne Feeney of Advisors Capital Management said on Bloomberg TV.
“So some of the flattening of the market just reflects how much has already been built into the market from those two good sources of news.”
However, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai, Taipei and Manila were all in positive territory after recent losses, while Wellington put on more than 1%. Jakarta and Bangkok fell.
London opened with losses, though Paris and Frankfurt both rose.
But Trump’s outburst against this week’s stimulus agreement raised eyebrows. The outgoing president slammed the package as not having enough for American families and told Congress to rethink it, raising the possibility of it being held up until after Christmas.
“It really is a disgrace,” he said in a video message posted on Twitter.
“I am asking Congress to amend this bill and increase the ridiculously low $600 to $2,000, or $4,000 for a couple,” he added, referring to relief cheques being prepared. “I’m also asking Congress to immediately get rid of the wasteful and unnecessary items from this legislation, and just send me a suitable bill.”
OANDA’s Jeffrey Halley said: “Asia’s first reaction appears to be that President Trump is bluffing, or that even if Trump vetoes the fiscal stimulus, Congress will act quickly with the necessary votes” to override his veto.
“Given that many Congressional representatives have probably already left Washington DC for the holidays, that could be complacent.
For now, markets appear to be holding off pressing the sell button until the situation clarifies.” DailyFX strategist Ilya Spivak warned: “This is yet another catalyst to inspire people to cash out.”
And Axi analyst Stephen Innes warned the first quarter of 2021 could be a struggle for markets. “Besides the obvious market sentiment shifts on the most worrying virus mutation, some dim-lit economic worries could still hurt the reflation trade” in the first three months of the year, he said.
“Even with the vaccine rollout getting underway, people had become polarised into one of two groups — those ready to travel now and those who are not prepared for six months or more.
“With the new variant of the virus unleashing its wrath on the UK, it is not a stretch to assume that the percentage of those ready to travel anytime soon will drop.” Worries about the impact of new lockdowns on travel have hit oil prices badly, with both main contracts down more than 1% on Wednesday and around 6% lower since hitting 10-month highs last week.
Investors are keeping a wary eye on post-Brexit trade talks as British and European Union negotiators struggle to find common ground with just over a week to go until a deadline for a deal passes.
The EU has rejected the latest UK offer on the crucial sticking point of fishing but is ready to pursue an agreement even beyond the end of the year cut-off, diplomats said.
According to sources in a meeting of ambassadors, EU negotiator Michel Barnier said he could not guarantee there would be a deal but that the bloc’s “door will remain open”, although Britain has rejected the idea of continuing talks into the new year.
Still, traders remain hopeful a last-minute deal will be hatched, which was providing a little support for sterling. In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 closed up 0.3% to 26,524.79 points; Hong Kong — Hang Seng ended up 0.9% to 26,343.10 points and Shanghai — Composite closed up 0.8% to 3,382.32 points on Wednesday. Source: https://www.gulf-times.com/