Asian Markets Momentum Plateaued After Low-Spirited China Factory Data

Asian stocks made a positive start today following gains on Wall Street but lost momentum as factory gate prices in China fell for the first time in nearly two years.

Shares in Tokyo and Hong Kong rose at the open, with the United States bracing for a tense night of midterm election results.

But they dipped in mid-morning trade after official data showed the world’s second-largest economy languishing under Beijing’s strict zero-Covid-19 policy.

Markets had climbed in New York and Europe yesterday as polls opened in crucial US elections that will shape the political fortunes of President Joe Biden.

Biden’s Democrats are facing a gargantuan struggle to hang onto control of Congress, and a Republican victory could pave the way for a White House comeback bid by Donald Trump.

Such a result could also lead to political deadlock in Washington – a prospect welcomed by investors “as it prevents any significant shifts in policy,” according to Scope Markets analyst James Hughes.

At the same time, market players are eying US inflation data due tomorrow, causing the dollar to retreat, said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda.

“The dollar got crushed today as a short-covering move accelerated as investors embraced risk appetite ahead of the midterm elections and Thursday’s pivotal inflation report,” AFP cited him saying in a note on Nov 8.

Tokyo was down 0.2% at the break, while Hong Kong lost 0.1% in morning trade, with Shanghai up 0.3%.

Other Asian markets were mostly higher, with Taipei up 1.4%, Seoul gaining 1.1% and Singapore up 0.3%. Sydney rose 0.6% while Jakarta was flat.

Speculation over how long Beijing will stick with its harsh lockdown-and-testing policies designed to stamp out Covid-19 has fuelled volatility in Chinese markets in recent days.

Official data showed today that China’s producer price index (PPI) fell by 1.3% on-year in October, pushing it into negative territory for the first time since December 2020.

The consumer price index (CPI) – the main gauge for retail inflation – rose by 2.1% on-year in October, moderating slightly from September’s two-year high of 2.8%.

Some stocks turned negative after “China inflation data printed a rather gloomy picture, with PPI remaining deflationary and CPI much weaker than expected, pointing to waning demand,” Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said in a note.

“Rolling lockdowns in China, as Covid-19 cases rebound, are catching oil traders leaning the wrong way,” he added. Both main crude indexes were down more than 2.5%.

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