Some Calm
Returns to Asian Markets Even as Trade Tensions Escalate
Stocks rise
in China after Beijing announces support measures a day after market plunges
triggered by tariffs imposed by President Trump.
Joe
RennisonDanielle KayeClaire Fu
By Joe
RennisonDanielle Kaye and Claire Fu
Published
April 7, 2025
Updated
April 8, 2025, 12:36 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/07/business/trump-tariffs-stock-markets.html
After three
days of global market turmoil not seen since the early days of the Covid-19
pandemic, stocks in Asia regained a measure of calm on Tuesday despite little
let up in the escalating trade tensions caused by President Trump’s tariffs.
Before
markets opened in China, the government unleashed a series of measures to
stabilize stocks. In turn, share prices in Hong Kong, a day after plunging 13.2
percent, rose 1.5 percent. Benchmarks in mainland China ticked up 1 percent,
recovering from big declines the day before.
In Japan,
the Nikkei 225, a key benchmark in Japan, gained 5 percent, recouping a portion
of the previous days losses. The uptick in sentiment followed comments made on
Monday by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who said he would soon begin
discussions with the Japanese government regarding tariffs.
The Kospi
index rose in South Korea rose about 1.5 percent.
Markets
around the world were unmoored last week by Mr. Trump’s announcement of broad
new tariffs — a base tax of 10 percent on American imports, plus significantly
higher rates on dozens of other countries. Countries have responded with
tariffs of their own on U.S. goods, or with threats of retaliation. China
retaliated forcefully on Friday, matching a new 34 percent tariff with one of
its own on many American imports.
In the
United States on Monday, the S&P 500 fell 0.2 percent after tumultuous
trading that at one point pulled the benchmark into bear market territory, or a
drop of 20 percent or more from its recent high. S&P futures, indicating
how markets might perform when they reopen for trading on Wednesday in New
York, were 1.5 percent higher.
Wall Street
executives and analysts are growing increasingly worried that escalating trade
tensions could do lasting damage to the global economy.
“The quicker
this issue is resolved, the better because some of the negative effects
increase cumulatively over time and would be hard to reverse,” Jamie Dimon, the
chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, wrote in his annual letter to shareholders
on Monday. Some bank economists are already forecasting that the economy will
slip into recession later this year.
The 10.5
percent drop in the S&P 500 on Thursday and Friday was the worst two-day
decline for the index since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.
With the new
higher-rate tariffs set to go into effect on Wednesday, Mr. Trump has remained
unrelenting on his trade stance. On Monday he issued a new ultimatum to China
to rescind its retaliatory tariffs on the United States, or face additional
tariffs of 50 percent beginning Wednesday.
But China
showed on Tuesday that it is not relenting.
Several
government departments and government-owned enterprises issued statements and
pledged to “maintain the smooth operation of the capital market.” And the
People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, vowed to support Central
Huijin Investment, the arm of China’s sovereign wealth fund that said it was
increasing its holdings of stock funds.
In addition,
seven companies affiliated with China Merchants Group, a large corporation
owned by the central government that trades in Hong Kong, said they would
accelerate a plan to buy back some of its shares, a move that typically lifts
stock prices.
The moves by
what is known as China’s “national team” were reminiscent of efforts Beijing
took during a market crisis in 2015.
At the time,
the Chinese government’s efforts to shore up stock prices came after its own
misjudged steps to boost and then cool prices. This time, Beijing’s
intervention appears to chime with a strategy by the Chinese leader, Xi
Jinping, of presenting his government as a pillar of steady calm against the
global economic turbulence unleashed by Mr. Trump’s tariffs.
It remains
to be seen how effective Beijing’s actions will be. The meltdown in Chinese
markets a decade ago was driven by a sudden loss of confidence by investors, so
propping up stocks helped calm nerves, said Zhiwu Chen, a professor of finance
at The University of Hong Kong.
But Mr.
Trump’s tariffs could inflict damage on China’s economy. “This time, it is much
deeper than just market psychology,” Mr. Chen said.
Christopher
Buckley, Amy Chang Chien and River Akira Davis contributed reporting.
Joe Rennison
writes about financial markets, a beat that ranges from chronicling the
vagaries of the stock market to explaining the often-inscrutable trading
decisions of Wall Street insiders.
Danielle
Kaye is a business reporter and a 2024 David Carr Fellow, a program for
journalists early in their careers.
Claire Fu
covers China with a focus on business and social issues in the country. She is
based in Seoul.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário