logo
China, Hong Kong stocks fall as initial Sino-US trade optimism wanes

China, Hong Kong stocks fall as initial Sino-US trade optimism wanes

Stocks in China and Hong Kong traded lower on Thursday, led by declines in the tech sector, as markets struggled to sustain the positive momentum from the Sino-U.S. trade talks that lacked concrete details.
ADVERTISEMENT China's blue-chip CSI 300 Index closed about 0.1% lower after wavering through the day, slipping from the three-week high touched on Wednesday.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index lost 1.4% at close to pull back from the nearly three-month high hit in the previous session.
Tech shares led losses in onshore and offshore markets. The CSI Semiconductor Index shed 1.5%, while the Hang Seng Tech Index dropped 2.2%. Among major losers, chipmaker SMIC fell 2% to a one-week low. Alibaba weakened 3.2% and EV-maker Xpeng slid 6.7%. The CSI Rare Earth Index closed flat after slipping nearly 1% in the morning session and continued to hover near its seven-month high.
ADVERTISEMENT
A trade truce between the world's two biggest economies was back on track, U.S President Donald Trump said, a day after negotiators from Washington and Beijing agreed on a framework to ease bilateral retaliatory tariffs.
Under the agreement, Beijing will lift export curbs on rare earth minerals and the U.S. will restore Chinese students' access to its universities, Trump said on Truth Social.
ADVERTISEMENT Yet the terms remain subject to final approvals, with details notably absent. The 55% tariffs on Chinese imports will also stay, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said.
"We still don't know if what Trump says will actually happen. It's disappointing that the tariffs rates were not dialled down at all and tech curbs on China were not even mentioned," said Jason Chan, senior investment strategist at Bank of East Asia, Hong Kong.
ADVERTISEMENT The talks left key issues, like chip exports, unaddressed, leaving room for conflicts in the future, and no one knows for how long the current truce will last, he added. Chinese markets have been struggling to recover from trade shocks for the past two months after Trump announced sweeping tariffs on April 2 that threatened the global trade system.
ADVERTISEMENT The CSI 300 Index has barely eked out any gains since then, while the Hang Seng Index has climbed 3.5%, but the two are underperforming the nearly 10% bounce in the MSCI World Index . The market is less sensitive to trade talks and investors are shifting focus to economic fundamentals, Wang Zhuo, partner at Zhuozhu Investment, said.
"The key for China now is to bolster manufacturers' confidence and break the deflationary trend."
(You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

European shares drop amid caution after Israel's attacks on Iran
European shares drop amid caution after Israel's attacks on Iran

Economic Times

time30 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

European shares drop amid caution after Israel's attacks on Iran

European shares opened sharply lower on Friday after Israel's attack on Iran dented global risk sentiment and sent investors flocking to safe haven assets. ADVERTISEMENT The pan-European STOXX 600 was down 1.2% at 543.54 points as of 0707 GMT. The benchmark is on track to log a fifth session in the red, setting it up for a weekly decline. Israel launched strikes against Iran on Friday, hitting nuclear facilities and ballistic missile factories, to prevent Tehran from building an atomic weapon. Iran retaliated by launching 100 drones. The tensions add to caution in global financial markets as they grapple with the impact of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff policy. The heightened tensions in the oil-rich Middle East sent prices of the commodity soaring, last up over 7%, weighing most heavily on airlines. The travel and leisure sector was down 3.1%. British Airways owner ICAG tumbled 4.8%, Lufthansa down 4.6% and EasyJet dropped 4.3%. ADVERTISEMENT Cruise operator Carnival's London-listed shares slipped 5%. On the flip side, energy stocks soared, with Shell and BP up 1.9% each. ADVERTISEMENT Shares of defence companies were also higher, with France's Dassault Aviation up 1.3% and Italy's Leonardo up 2.3%. (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)

Gold is ‘flavour of the month', says Richard Harris amid crisis hedging
Gold is ‘flavour of the month', says Richard Harris amid crisis hedging

Economic Times

time44 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Gold is ‘flavour of the month', says Richard Harris amid crisis hedging

Agencies So, they will come off, but in the very short term they may be seen as a gold substitute, but gold to my mind seems to be the key factor there that people will be looking at. "We have got the closing deadline of July the 9th for the tariffs to come back in line. So, we have got a lot of things coming up here and we are in danger of maybe some event, maybe it is this Israeli event, I do not think so, but maybe it is this event where the markets really say okay, that is enough. We have had enough. Markets," says Richard Harris, Port Shelter Investment. Between Iran and Israel right now. US for the moment has opted to stay out of this war. But what are you making of the development between Iran and Israel? How bad could it get for global markets also in terms of crude? Richard Harris: Well, first of all, the Israeli thing, the Israelis have been for this for quite a long time. It is well known that Trump has tried to persuade them not to. They have clearly gone against his advice and the Americans now are obviously up to prevent any attacks against US areas, but they have made it quite clear that they have not really been involved. So, Iran then if they are looking at retaliation, they are really looking at Israel. Now, this may come explicitly in terms of the kind of drone strikes that they tried to do earlier, but Israel's defences are quite strong there or implicitly, in terms of maybe terrorist attacks in other places, but it clearly does not help the situation. It adds to global uncertainty. It adds to the uncertainty in the market and actually Trump is probably feeling a little bit miffed that perhaps the Israelis have not quite followed his advice. What do you think could be the impact on markets other than crude because what you are seeing today, of course, is a knee-jerk reaction. Most global markets were already scaling at an all-time peak, perhaps looking for a reason to profit take, but do you sense that we could spiral down further? Richard Harris: Yes, I mean we have seen a very good recovery in markets generally. I mean, Europe because it is a diversifier to the US, the US because actually we have had the Trump taco trade which is where there have been small pieces of good news that has led a recovery in US share prices. We are now at a stage where markets pretty well are back to where Trump started, that is actually an important sign. But we are also much more fragile. Unemployment is looking less good than it was. Growth is looking less good than it was. We have got the closing deadline of July the 9th for the tariffs to come back in line. So, we have got a lot of things coming up here and we are in danger of maybe some event, maybe it is this Israeli event, I do not think so, but maybe it is this event where the markets really say okay, that is enough. We have had enough. Markets are very fragile and it is just waiting for that unknown unknown event in order to unwind. What happens to money flow in a case like this? I mean, this is not the first time that we have had two countries battle it out. We have seen that since Russia-Ukraine, then it was Israel and Gaza and now Iran again. We have seen that here in India as well with our own neighbour. But does it really impact money flows at all or do you think that is clearly restricted to tariffs and what comes of it? Richard Harris: We have seen a lot of these issues over the last few years and markets react. It takes a day or so to react and then they come back. At the moment, we do not really know what is happening. But the markets are quite immune if you like to a number of these factors. They survived two major wars. They survived all sorts of issues with Trump and tariffs and still they are trading at a reasonably high level. Bull markets die hard. I would expect that this will end up being another skirmish that will disappear in next two to three weeks. Maybe wrong, but I think the probabilities are like that. I think one escalation could be if the Iranians do decide to see if they can choke off oil deliveries out of the Arabian Gulf, then the Americans will step in because it is important for the world and the Americans do see it as part of their holy mission to keep that gulf open. So, I think that if you are looking at oil prices, they are likely to be quite volatile because you have got these different factors involved. But at the end of the day, the US will look to keep it open, whether that will then cause a secondary dispute between the US and in Iran, well, that is probably going to happen anyway, but I think that will burn at a lower level. Is the most obvious trade right now is maybe go ahead and buy gold because at the morning today gold is already at near to its all-time high, holding on to the gains of over 1.5%. Richard Harris: Well, gold is flavour of the month, is not it, and the dollar it normally takes that view, but because we have had the whole issue with Trump and weakness in the dollar, I think it is being less successful. Of course, the other thing for those who actually believe it is Bitcoin, which the cryptos will probably do quite well in this environment. Crypto is actually quite focused on the equity market. So, they will come off, but in the very short term they may be seen as a gold substitute, but gold to my mind seems to be the key factor there that people will be looking at.

India, US trade talks hit hurdle on Trump tariffs, GM crops
India, US trade talks hit hurdle on Trump tariffs, GM crops

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

India, US trade talks hit hurdle on Trump tariffs, GM crops

Trade officials from India and the US have hardened their stance on some key issues as they race to conclude an interim deal before higher US tariffs take effect in July, people familiar with the matter said. Negotiators from both sides, who met in New Delhi this week, wrangled over issues including a US demand that India open up its market to genetically-modified crops , officials in New Delhi said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. The US also wants India to eliminate tariffs and ease price controls on medical devices, and relax rules on data localization policy, which mandates storage of data on local servers, the people said. New Delhi is pushing for the US to exempt India from existing sectoral tariffs on steel and automobiles, and threatened reciprocal tariffs that are scheduled to kick in on July 9, the people said. India also wants to be exempted from proposed duties on pharmaceuticals, they said. US President Donald Trump has launched investigations in the pharmaceuticals sector under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, a precursor to higher tariffs. He had used the Section 232 probes, which looks at the national-security implications of imports in critical sectors, to impose tariffs on steel, aluminum and automobiles and its components. India's Ministry of Commerce and Industry didn't immediately respond to an email seeking information. Trade analysts say the toughening in stance on both sides may not derail the deal, but will certainly prolong the negotiations. India also appears to be giving up more on tariffs than the US, according to Ajay Srivastava, founder of the New Delhi-based think tank Global Trade Research Initiative. India is cutting its most-favored nation tariffs, while the US hasn't offered to do the same, and is also insisting on the 10% baseline tariff remains for all nations. 'India should enter a deal only when it is balanced,' Srivastava said. 'A small deal is very much possible, but there shouldn't be pressure as India doesn't have much to lose even if the deadline is missed.' A US trade team led by Brendan Lynch, assistant US Trade Representative, met officials in New Delhi on June 5-10, with both sides agreeing to expedite talks to conclude an agreement that includes 'early wins,' Indian officials said earlier this week. Follow Bloomberg India on WhatsApp for exclusive content and analysis on what billionaires, businesses and markets are doing. Sign up here. Prime Minister Narendra Modi , who is scheduled to head to the Group of Seven summit in Canada in coming days, may also have an opportunity to advance the trade talks with Trump while there. India and the US are working on a phased trade deal with an early agreement targeted for July.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store