Global stock markets mostly rose Monday, extending last week’s strong gains, while oil prices steadied after China reaffirmed its commitment to an economically painful zero-Covid policy.
The dollar meanwhile was down against key rivals ahead of this week’s US midterm elections. Global markets and oil prices were buoyant last week on hopes Beijing may begin to roll back policies aimed at stamping out coronavirus within its borders.
But on Saturday, the Chinese government said it would “unswervingly” stick to the current plan involving harsh lockdowns and strict quarantine and testing regimens for even the smallest clusters of cases. Despite the official stance, “there are still hopes in the market” that Beijing may relax Covid-19 curbs in the coming months, Iris Pang, chief economist for Greater China at ING Wholesale Banking, told AFP.
“Traders believe that the Chinese government cannot permanently hold these existing Covid measures, and therefore the only direction is… looser Covid measures,” she said. Ongoing large-scale events, such as the China International Import Expo in Shanghai, are also seen by investors as “a kind of water-testing” by Beijing, to see if cases and deaths rise significantly, Pang added.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index bounded 2.7 percent higher. Shares in Europe were mostly higher in afternoon trading. Wall Street stocks opened higher modestly higher, the day before US midterm elections.
US voters decide every two years who gets the majority in both chambers of Congress. The outcome will decide whether US President Joe Biden, who was swept to power two years ago in one of the most fraught elections Washington has witnessed, will be able to get any new policies passed or if the opposition will be able to frustrate his agenda.
“A divided government can be good for the market,” noted Neil Wilson, analyst at Markets.com. “A Republican clean sweep would likely take key Democrat legislation off the table — mainly positive for markets — whilst in the unlikely event that the Democrats retain both houses it could see them push on with fiscal stimulus, mainly negative since it might be inflationary.”
Meanwhile, shares in Apple slid 1.0 percent after the tech giant warned customers would face longer wait times for iPhones with the holiday season approaching.
This comes after Covid restrictions in central China “temporarily impacted” production at the world’s largest factory producing the smartphone. Facebook-parent Meta will meanwhile become the latest tech firm to scale back its workforce, with plans to lay off thousands of employees this week, US media reported Sunday. Shares in the firm jumped 3.6 percent at the start of trading.
On Friday, Wall Street equities ended a volatile session higher after US jobs data showed hiring remained resilient and wages continued to rise, though at a slower pace.
That raised hopes of a soft landing for the world’s biggest economy despite aggressive Fed rate hikes aimed at taming inflation. “The bullish reversal in the markets suggests investors are perhaps happy to see signs that the US economy is holding its own rather well in terms of employment,” said market analyst Fawad Razaqzada at City Index and FOREX.com.
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