Business

Equities mixed as stalled stimulus, Brexit talks offset vaccines

Immediate impact of pandemic also acting as a drag on trading floors

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 11 Dec 2020 2:20PM

Equities mixed as stalled stimulus, Brexit talks offset vaccines
Wall Street ended on a mixed note, with the Dow and S&P 500 in the red but the Nasdaq rising. Meanwhile in Asia,  Tokyo, Shanghai, Sydney and Taipei all fell but Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, Jakarta, Manila and Wellington advanced. – Pixabay pic, December 11, 2020

HONG KONG – Asian markets were mixed Friday as stalled United States stimulus talks and rising virus infections continued to counter vaccine optimism, while the pound struggled after Boris Johnson warned Britain could crash out of the European Union without a trade deal.

While most observers are confident the world economy will enjoy a healthy recovery next year as vaccinations are administered, the immediate impact of the disease as countries endure a fresh wave is acting as a drag on trading floors.

A major headache for investors is US lawmakers’ inability to agree to a new stimulus, with both sides still blaming each other just weeks before they break up for the new congressional session next month.

Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell has given his backing to a US$916 billion (RM3.71  trillion) plan put forward by the White House but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has thrown her weight behind a slightly smaller, bipartisan proposal.

“We’re just kind of waiting on a deal,” said Keith Gangl at Gradient Investments. “I wouldn’t expect the market to do a whole lot one way or the other going into the year-end from here, especially if the stimulus package keeps getting pushed out.”

The standoff comes despite a slew of worsening economic data, which analysts had hoped would spur politicians to work harder for a deal. 

The latest figures showed the number of people applying for unemployment benefits surged last week by 137,000, far more than expected, as record new virus cases have forced leaders to impose strict and economically painful containment measures.

With millions of unemployed workers facing a bleak Christmas, Pelosi said lawmakers may stay in Washington through the holiday to pass a new bill.

“We’ll see how it goes. But we cannot leave here without having a piece of legislation,” Pelosi told reporters on Thursday.

Wall Street ended on a mixed note, with the Dow and S&P 500 in the red but the Nasdaq rising.

Asia also struggled to gain traction, with Tokyo, Shanghai, Sydney and Taipei all falling but Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, Jakarta, Manila and Wellington advanced.

There was some good news on the stimulus front in Europe as EU leaders finally resolved a bitter dispute with Poland and Hungary that saved a landmark €1.8 trillion (RM8.87 trillion) recovery plan for the beleaguered bloc.

Also Thursday, the European Central Bank boosted its main virus-fighting tool, an emergency bond-buying programme, by €500 billion to €1.85 trillion and extended it by nine months.

However, that came as talks on a post-Brexit trade deal stagnated, with Britain and the EU struggling to break their deadlock on issues including fishing rights and fair trade.

After talks with EU chief Ursula von der Leyen, British Prime Minister Johnson warned the chances of an agreement were slim.

While he vowed to go the “extra mile” for a trade pact, he said his cabinet “agreed very strongly with me that the deal on the table is really not at the moment right for the UK”. 

“So what I told the cabinet this evening is to get on and make those preparations” for no deal.

The possibility that Britain will leave the EU without a deal sent the pound tumbling Thursday and it struggled to recover in Asia as investors contemplated cross-Channel trade being subject to tariffs and quotas from January 1.– AFP, December 11, 2020

Related News

Business / 4y

Oil prices up as traders weigh demand, supply issues

Business / 4y

Asian markets mixed ahead of Fed meeting as China battles Covid spike

Business / 4y

Asian markets rally as earnings divert from inflation worry

Business / 5y

Global stocks mostly rise with Biden stimulus in focus

Business / 5y

Sterling, equities rise as Brexit talks reach endgame

Business / 5y

Brexit fears weigh on pound, and most equities

Spotlight

Malaysia

Bersatu-PH tie-up a possibility as coalition seeks Malay support, analyst says

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Woman molested on her way home from work (video)

Malaysia

Court allows Daim's daughter to permanently keep passport

Malaysia

Santiago pokes holes in data centre hype, asks: Who really benefits?

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Jeweller vows to pursue Rosmah until ‘every penny’ is recovered as RM67.5m battle enters enforcement phase

Malaysia

Ambulance carrying two injured men crashes en route to hospital after MPV collision in Besut

Malaysia

Man blames 'lack of love' for sexual assault on teens

Business

BNM's OPR to stay at 2.75 pcent in 2026 amid strong domestic demand - Kenanga IB

Malaysia

Missing jewellery: Rosmah ordered to pay RM67.5 million

You may be interested

Business

Kami Builders secure RM300 million ASEAN sustainability sukuk, channels Islamic capital into QIU campus development

Business

Ringgit surges as Iran deal optimism weighs on US dollar and oil prices

Business

Ringgit holds firm despite US inflation shock as markets brace for Federal Reserve decision

Business

Retail sales grow 3.7% in Q1 2026 but fall short of expectations amid cost pressures

Business

AI should support human thinking, not replace it - MDEC CEO

Business

Unemployment rate rises to 3.0 per cent in April 2026 - DOSM