BEIJING: Asian markets on Thursday extended this week’s global rally following a fresh record in New York, while safe havens retreated as concerns about the impact of the deadly China virus eased.
Despite Beijing announcing that almost 500 people had died from the outbreak and more than 24,000 were infected, analysts said traders were taking heart from the fact that the spread outside China had not spiralled.
Moves by Chinese authorities to support mainland stocks were also providing cheer, with the central bank pumping more than $200 billion into financial markets and the government easing restrictions on equities trading.
There had been a worry that the virus could hammer the global and Chinese economies, which had been showing signs of stabilising in recent months following a protracted growth slowdown.
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World Bank head David Malpass said the group plans to lower its global growth forecast owing to an expected hit to China and the likely impact on global supply chains.
But Lisa Shalett at Morgan Stanley told Bloomberg TV: “These… dislocations tend to be short-lived, and do tend to produce very good entry points and buying opportunities.”
Shanghai rose 1.8 percent, matching the previous day’s advance and digging further into the losses of more almost eight percent suffered Monday. Hong Kong was up 0.3 percent and Tokyo finished one percent higher.
Sydney and Seoul each gained 0.4 percent, while Singapore was up one percent. Mumbai, Manila, Taipei, Jakarta and Wellington were also well into positive territory.
The gains tracked a strong lead from Wall Street, where the Nasdaq surged more than two percent to a new record.
“After a very cold end to last week and a negative post-holiday catch up move by China’s equity market on Monday, markets have now embarked on a new rebound,” said Rodrigo Catril of National Australia Bank.
He said the gains had been “spurred by China’s efforts to support its economy alongside an apparent decline in concerns over the coronavirus impact on the global economy”.
AxiCorp strategist Stephen Innes also pointed out that central bankers were showing limited worry about the long-term impact of the outbreak, adding that “markets look to be shrugging off coronavirus concerns. At least for now.”
The rally in riskier assets saw investors shift out of safer investments, with gold shedding one percent Wednesday, while the Japanese yen was sitting at its weakest since January 24, having hit a four-week high on Monday.
However, oil prices are wallowing around one-year lows on concerns that demand in China will be hammered by the virus, with millions of people in the country in lockdown and prevented from travelling.
Both main contracts staged a minor rally Wednesday but there are fears of further losses this year.
“The oil market is falling sharply, which is pretty alarming given (producer cartel) OPEC is considering an emergency cut,” Innes said. “But the implied near-term conservative fall in demand from China could create a supply/demand imbalance” of more than a million barrels a day in the first quarter.