Escalating China tensions could become an obstacle for
U.S. stock rally
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[June 01, 2020] By
David Randall and Lawrence Delevingne
NEW YORK/BOSTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump's directive on Friday to begin the process of eliminating
special treatment for Hong Kong is likely to put China-U.S. tensions
back in the headlines over the coming months, creating a new driver of
volatility in global equity markets.
Some investors said Trump's move firmly brings back to the fore an issue
that had receded earlier this year when Washington and Beijing struck a
Phase 1 deal in their months-long battle over trade terms.
The trade war, which began in earnest in the spring of 2018, had been a
constant source of volatility for global markets, as a steady drip of
headlines whiplashed investors. The Phase 1 deal helped push the S&P 500
to all-time highs earlier in the year, until coronavirus hit. Since then
COVID-19 has been the primary driver of investor sentiment.
While tension between the world's two largest economies started to
re-emerge over the past month as the United States blamed China for the
spread of the virus, Trump's move now could mark the beginning of a new
round of escalation. Investors said it is likely to lead to volatility
as the administration looks to eliminate a range of policy agreements,
from extradition to export controls, and threatens new sanctions.
"What Hong Kong represents is longer than a one-day or one-year issue,"
said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at the Leuthold Group.
Paulsen said he believes that geopolitical tensions are likely to hang
over markets over the longer term.
A re-emergence of U.S.-China tensions would add to serious risks that
already hang over the market. Paulsen and other investors said markets
remain focused on the trajectory of the coronavirus pandemic and
potential signs of a U.S. recovery.
Some investors also said U.S. and international protests in recent days
after the death of an unarmed black man in Minneapolis in police custody
last week, could further dent sentiment and particularly hurt retailers
and small businesses.
Investors have grown increasingly nervous that the U.S. stock rally over
the past two months has become disconnected from the economic
devastation wrought by nationwide lockdowns. The S&P is up more than 35%
from its March lows, even as key metrics such as unemployment and gross
domestic product have flashed their worst readings since the Great
Depression.
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U.S. President Donald Trump down the West Wing colonnade from the
Oval Office with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (C) and Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo (L) as he arrives to make an announcement about
U.S. trade relations with China and Hong Kong in the Rose Garden of
the White House in Washington, U.S., May 29, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst/File Photo
MARKET RISK
The rally slowed in May as investors assessed how the virus would behave and how
the global economy would recover, as countries started to loosen restrictions. A
serious rupture between Washington and Beijing now could throw a wildcard in
that assessment.
Erin Browne, a portfolio manager at Pimco, the massive bond fund, said strains
in the U.S.-China relationship is "one of the primary market risks" into the
second half of 2020. She said she is hedging her portfolio accordingly.
Browne said the tensions may weigh on the Phase 1 trade deal. "While a repeal of
the Phase 1 trade deal between the U.S.-China would hurt market sentiment into
an important election year for President Trump, the risks of that happening are
escalating," she said.
Indeed, late last month White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said Trump was
so "miffed" with Beijing over the novel coronavirus and other matters that the
U.S.-China trade deal is not as important to him as it once was.
ELECTION POLITICS
Trump's tough rhetoric against China comes in the midst of a 2020 re-election
campaign in which opinion polls show U.S. voters increasingly embittered toward
Beijing, especially over the novel coronavirus.
Others said the looming U.S. presidential election means Trump will tread
carefully to prevent a wider rupture.
"Trump was in between a rock and a hard place, because it's very popular right
now to be down on China ... particularly with his base," said Lou Brien, market
strategist at DRW Trading. "On the other hand to have come out with harsher
penalties or sanctions would risk the stock market."
(Additional reporting by Karen Brettell; Writing by Ira Iosebashvili; Editing by
Megan Davies and Daniel Wallis)
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