Hong Kong Market falls as trade war jitters continue

Capital Market 

US Donald Trump's threat to increase tariffs on Chinese imports continues to send shock waves across global financial markets, sinking stocks in the US and overnight. US stocks dropped by the most since March and equities in closed at their lowest in five weeks. In the US, the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq all finished the day solidly in the red, adding to their losses from Monday. The Dow fell about 473 points, marking the second-worst trading day of the year. The S&P 500 was down 1.7% and the Nasdaq fell 2%. European stocks fared poorly too. The FTSE 100, DAX, and CAC 40 all closed 1.6% lower. The pan-European Stoxx 600 fell 1.4%.

S.-China trade talks in between China and the United States, which have been clouded by the Trump administration's renewed threat to increase tariffs on Chinese goods.

Global stocks were ailing after Sunday threatened further tariffs on Chinese imports that could come into effect on Friday, throwing global markets into disarray. His administration doubled down on that threat Monday evening. Investors previously expected and to be close to sorting out a trade deal after months of negotiations. A lack of an agreement between the world's two largest economies could stymie global growth.

Speaking to reporters on Monday, US Trade and said China reneged on previous agreements over the weekend, undermining progress towards a detailed trade agreement between the world's two largest economies. Lighthizer, the top US trade negotiator, said the administration would increase penalties on $200 billion of Chinese goods to 25% from 10% on Friday. Trump renewed his threat to raise tariffs on Sunday.

China isn't the only place with which Trump wants to change trade relations. The has other trade-related issues on its plate: The European auto industry is also on his list and could get hit with tariffs. The US-driven replacement for NAFTA, called USMCA, took more than a year to negotiate but is not yet ratified. In short, uncertainty is back.

Blue chips fell across the board. (00941) dipped 1.1% to HK$72.65. AIA (01299) shed 1.7% to HK$80.4. (00005) dipped 1.8% to HK$67.45. HKEX (00388) slipped 1.6% to HK$261 after it reported 1Q earnings growth of 2% year-on-year increase in first-quarter profit to HK$2.6 billion. Chinese and gaming giant gained 1.1% to HK$384.8, after it announced a public test of its own Game for Peace, a game similar to PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds.

Exporters were hurt by US president Trump's potential tariff hike on China's imports to the country. (00669) sank 4.4% to HK$53.45. (02313) declined by 2.6% to HK$101.3. (00425) dropped 3% to HK$24.35. (01382) retreated 3.3% to HK$6.83. (03606) fell 3.4% to HK$25.7.

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First Published: Wed, May 08 2019. 15:02 IST