• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
On March 24th, the highest 7-day annualized yield of Tencent Wealth Managements "Current Account +" was 1.5210%, and the lowest was 0.7730%. The highest 7-day annualized yield of WeChat Pays "Lingqian Tong" was 1.1860%, and the lowest was 1.0200%. The highest 7-day annualized yield of Alipays "Yuebao" was 1.2310%, and the lowest was 1.0010%.On Tuesday, March 24, the Hang Seng Index opened 377.35 points higher, or 1.55%, at 24,759.82; the Hang Seng Tech Index opened 61.1 points higher, or 1.3%, at 4,773.58; the H-share Index opened 89.07 points higher, or 1.07%, at 8,396.89; and the Red Chip Index opened 39.86 points higher, or 0.96%, at 4,179.96.Hang Seng Index futures opened 1.93% higher at 24,837 points, a premium of 442 points.On March 24th, it was reported that on March 23rd, the Shenzhen Development and Reform Commission released the "Shenzhen 2026 Work Plan for Optimizing the Market-Oriented Business Environment." The plan proposes to accelerate the commercial operation of intelligent connected vehicles. It includes promoting the construction of a government regulatory platform for intelligent connected vehicles in Shenzhen, achieving tiered and categorized opening of testing and demonstration roads for intelligent connected vehicles throughout the city, exploring pilot projects of autonomous driving technology in scenarios such as public transportation, taxis, ride-hailing services, and logistics delivery, and promoting the large-scale application of functional unmanned vehicles. Taking Nanshan District and Baoan District as pilot areas, it aims to unify cross-district standards, technical standards, and regulatory frameworks for the commercial operation of intelligent connected vehicles, and promote road network connectivity and mutual recognition of qualifications.On March 24th, the Shenzhen Development and Reform Commission released the "Shenzhen 2026 Work Plan for Optimizing the Market-Oriented Business Environment" on March 23rd. The plan proposes to broaden the scope of private investment. It will formulate and implement a new mechanism for public-private partnerships (PPP), and continuously increase the promotion of major projects to private capital. It supports private capital participation in projects with certain returns, including railways, nuclear power, hydropower, inter-provincial and inter-regional DC transmission channels, oil and gas pipelines, imported liquefied natural gas receiving and storage facilities, and water supply. For eligible projects, private capital can hold more than 10% of the shares. The plan further strengthens government procurement support for SMEs. For engineering procurement projects exceeding 4 million yuan that are suitable for SMEs, in addition to reserving more than 40% of the total budget specifically for SMEs, the reserved ratio will be further expanded. Procurement units are encouraged to increase the prepayment ratio for contracts with private enterprises to more than 30% of the contract amount.

Asia Stocks Attempt A Rebound; China Data Pose A Concern

Charlie Brooks

May 16, 2022 09:52

A2.png


Asian stock markets attempted a rare climb on Monday, after Wall Street's rebound from record lows, but investors were bracing for bad news from Chinese GDP statistics due later in the session.


China's yearly retail sales are anticipated to decline by 6.1%, while industrial output is expected to increase by only 0.4%. Given that new bank lending in China fell to its lowest level in almost four and a half years in April, risks are to the downside.


"The reports should emphasize the economic damage caused by the country's zero-COVID policy," said Bruce Kasman, head of economic research at JPMorgan. "We anticipate contractions in production and demand indices," he said.


"After lowering our GDP prediction for the entire year to 4.3%, the policy response to weakening remained unexpectedly muted," he continued. The CNY is where the action is since the PBOC has remained silent despite the recent decline.


Beijing permitted a further reduction in mortgage loan interest rates for select homebuyers on Sunday, and there were rumors that the central bank would reduce its medium-term lending rate by 10 basis points on Monday.


MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific equities outside Japan rose 0.3% after falling 2.7% last week to a two-year low.


Even though a weak yen provided some help for exporters, Japan's Nikkei index gained 1.2% after falling 2.1% last week.


In early trading, S&P 500 stock futures gained an additional 0.3%, while Nasdaq futures gained 0.6%. Both remain well below their yearly peaks, with the S&P having declined for six consecutive weeks. 


The U.S. consumer confidence reached an 11-year low at the beginning of May due to sky-high inflation and rising interest rates, which elevated the stakes for April retail sales coming on Tuesday.

DOWNGRADING GROWTH

The Federal Reserve's extreme hawkishness has led to a dramatic tightening of financial conditions, prompting Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) to reduce its GDP growth prediction for 2022 from 2.6 percent to 2.4 percent. Annual growth in 2023 is now anticipated to be 1.6%, down from 2.2% previously.


Jan Hatzius, an economist at Goldman Sachs, stated, "Our financial conditions index has tightened by more than 100 basis points, which should exert a drag on GDP growth of roughly 1 percentage point."


"We anticipate that the current tightening of financial conditions will continue, in part because we believe the Federal Reserve will deliver as anticipated."


Futures contracts suggest 50 basis-point increases in both June and July and rates between 2.5-3.0 percent by the end of the year, up from the current range of 0.75-1.0%.


Fears that all of this tightening may result in a recession prompted a rebound in bonds last week, with 10-year rates falling 21 basis points from their peak of 3.20 percent. Monday morning, yields were up slightly at 2.94 percent.


The dollar retreated from a two-decade high, though not by much. The dollar index was recently seen at 104.550, close to its all-time high of 105.010.


The euro remained at $1.0397, having reached a low of $1.0348 last week, while the dollar rose to 129.44 yen, having fallen to 127.54 yen last week.


Bitcoin was last up 5.1 percent at $31,277, having hit its lowest level since December 2020 last week following the collapse of so-called stablecoin TerraUSD.


In commodities markets, gold remained under pressure from high rates and a strong dollar, and was last up 1.1% at $1,810 per ounce, having lost 3.8% in the previous week.


Oil prices increased as U.S. gasoline prices reached a record high, China appeared poised to loosen its restrictions, and investors grew concerned that supplies would become scarce if the European Union banned Russian oil. [O/R]


Brent was quoted at $112.28 a barrel, up 73 cents, while U.S. crude rose 79 cents to $111.1 per barrel. [O/R]