Business

Asia markets mostly up but virus, weak data keep traders cautious

New readings give traders dose of reality following vaccine successes and Biden victory

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 26 Nov 2020 4:00PM

Asia markets mostly up but virus, weak data keep traders cautious
Official figures show applications for jobless aid rose for a second straight week as businesses were hit by a sharp increase in new infections and deaths that have led several major cities including New York and Los Angeles to close bars and restaurants. – Pixabay pic, November 26, 2020

HONG KONG – Most stocks rose today – continuing this month’s vaccine-fuelled markets rally – but traders moved cautiously, with an eye on virus infections across the globe that are forcing governments to impose containment measures.

With at least three inoculations in the pipeline and possibly rolled out within weeks, the general mood on trading floors is upbeat for 2021, but a fresh batch of data out of the United States underlined the immediate impact of the disease and the long road ahead for economies.

And notes from the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting warned that the country’s recovery would be tougher without a new stimulus package.

Official figures showed applications for jobless aid rose for a second straight week as businesses were hit by a sharp increase in new infections and deaths that have led several major cities including New York and Los Angeles to close bars and restaurants.

The readings gave traders a dose of reality following weeks of fervent buying in reaction to vaccine successes and Joe Biden’s election victory. 

“The data… suggested that the US recovery was slowing as government support programmes ran off, and that the massive spike in Covid-19 is infecting the real economy," said OANDA’s Jeffrey Halley.

The crisis elsewhere was laid bare as Britain warned it expects to suffer its heaviest annual slump in more than three centuries, with the economy tipped to shrink 11.3% in 2020. 

The Dow and S&P 500 ended lower yesterday after hitting records the day before, while the Nasdaq hit a new all-time high as tech firms – which have benefited from people being forced to stay home – surged.

Asian markets drifted in the morning but moved broadly positive as the day wore on.

Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Seoul, Taipei, Jakarta and Bangkok rose but there were losses in Sydney, Mumbai, Singapore, Manila and Wellington. – AFP, November 26, 2020

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