Business

Markets rise on vaccines and progress on Brexit, US stimulus talks

Covid-19 cases surge, however, drives tug-of-war between long-term optimism and short-term pain

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 16 Dec 2020 4:54PM

Markets rise on vaccines and progress on Brexit, US stimulus talks
Traders in Asia and Europe were buoyed by developments over post-Brexit trade talks and a long deadlocked US stimulus plan, while the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines in Britain, the US and Canada managed to stem concerns over rising global infections. – AFP pic, December 16, 2020

HONG KONG – Markets rose in Asia today thanks to US stimulus talks, Brexit hopes and Covid-19 vaccine rollouts, but a surge in virus cases and lockdown measures continued to cause a tug-of-war between long-term optimism and near-term pain.

After months of stuttering talks between lawmakers in Washington, there appear to be signs of progress on a new rescue package for the world's top economy as they discuss a bipartisan package.

High-level politicians from both sides remain locked in talks to resolve their differences before the end of the year, when millions of Americans could lose crucial support.

The lawmakers are working on a plan that strips out two contentious issues that had kept Democrats and Republicans from making a deal, while they are also looking to tie any new package in the passage of a so-called omnibus bill to keep the government funded.

Hopes for a breakthrough helped fire a rally on Wall Street yesterday, with all three main indexes ending more than one percent higher.

That helped Asia to post healthy gains, helping pare losses following a weak start to the week.

Tokyo, Hong Kong, Sydney, Seoul, Mumbai, Singapore and Wellington all rose, while Taipei, Manila and Jakarta put on more than one percent. Bangkok and Shanghai were flat.

London, Paris and Frankfurt all rose at the open.

Hopes that the economy can get back on track next year were given an extra lift yesterday when the European Medicines Agency said it had brought forward a meeting to decide on authorising the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine by more than a week to December 21.

The drug is already being administered in Britain, the US and Canada.

That came as the US Food and Drug Administration recommended experts give the go-ahead later this week to a second vaccine, produced by Moderna.

“Progress over an economic relief package in Washington, Brexit deal optimism that could settle by week's end, and the likely seamless rollout of multiple highly effective vaccines have mixed to paint trading screens Christmassy green,” said Axi strategist Stephen Innes.

The gains came “despite the numerous headwinds both from the virus's spread and the risk of increasingly tighter mobility restrictions”, he added.

The need for a big rollout of the vaccine has been laid bare by soaring infection and death rates around the world, which have led governments to impose strict containment measures leading into the Christmas holidays.

But Rodrigo Catril at National Australia bank noted: “Prospect of stricter lockdowns in Europe and US not enough to derail the positive vibes.”

Traders were also awaiting the conclusion later in the day of the Federal Reserve's latest policy meeting, hoping for some guidance on its plans for monetary policy in the new year.

On currency markets, the pound built on recent gains as British and European negotiators press on with talks on a post-Brexit trade deal.

Investors were excited by a tweet from Nicholas Watt, a senior political editor at the BBC, that “the UK is heading towards a Brexit deal with the EU”, fuelling hopes of a breakthrough soon.

Catril added: “We have long expected a deal, and ignored the political posturing, and a positive outcome would see further strength” in sterling. – AFP, December 16, 2020

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