Business

Markets sink as talk of Pelosi Taiwan trip fans China-US tensions

Three main American indexes reverse early rally, end in negative territory, with Asia following suit

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 02 Aug 2022 5:00PM

Markets sink as talk of Pelosi Taiwan trip fans China-US tensions
Hong Kong and Shanghai led losses, shedding around 3%, while Taipei was off about 1.8%. – AFP pic, August 2, 2022

HONG KONG – Asian markets tumbled today on geopolitical fears after reports that US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would visit Taiwan fanned China-US tensions.

Traders were already skittish after a string of data showed economies beginning to take a hit from surging inflation and central bank interest rate hikes aimed at taming prices.

A possible meeting between Pelosi and Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen is sure to anger Beijing, which views the island as its territory and has said the White House was playing “with fire”.

While observers do not think the move will spark a conflict, US officials said China was preparing possible military provocations that could include firing missiles in the Taiwan Strait or “large-scale” incursions into Taiwan’s airspace.

White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters there was “no reason for Beijing to turn a potential visit consistent with longstanding US policies into some sort of crisis”.

Still, the spike in tensions between the world’s two superpowers has sent shivers through trading floors, compounding worries that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could escalate into a wider war.

Reports of the visit hit US stocks, with all three main indexes reversing an early rally to end in negative territory.

And Asia followed suit.

Hong Kong and Shanghai led losses, shedding around 3%, while Taipei was off about 1.8%. Tokyo was more than 1% lower, while Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Wellington and Jakarta were also well down.

And on currency markets, the safe-haven yen jumped to a two-month high against the dollar, and the Taiwan dollar dropped 0.7%.

“Risk is mounting,” said Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management.

“As Pelosi is almost sure to visit Taiwan on Tuesday, now it is in China’s hands to see if the situation escalates,” he said, adding that while “it could be little more than a tempest in a teapot still, international and Taiwan investors are pretty concerned”.

“No party wants a real war, but the risk of mishap or even aggressive war game escalation is real, which could always lead to a tactical mistake.”

The flare-up in tensions comes less than a week after Biden and Xi Jinping held phone talks during which the Chinese president warned the United States not to “play with fire” regarding the island.

However, Ayako Yoshioka, at Wealth Enhancement Group, told Bloomberg Radio the crisis may be another “short-term dislocation” for investors but “it’s always concerning when they do happen”.

The selling on markets comes as investors try to assess the outlook for the global economy as leaders try to bring down inflation by lifting rates while at the same time maintaining growth.

Data this week showed the US economy was in a technical recession, China was being battered by Covid-19 lockdowns around the country, and Europe was on the brink as an energy crisis caused by the Ukraine war compounded its own inflation problems.

Traders will be keeping a close eye on the Friday release of US jobs data, which will give fresh insight into the state of the economy, with a weak reading providing the Fed some room to ease back on its rate hikes.

On oil markets, both main contracts extended yesterday’s sell-off on falling demand expectations as economies slow. – AFP, August 2, 2022

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