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Asian Stocks Down, China Likely to Widen Private Industry Crackdown

Published 10/11/2021, 09:51 PM
Updated 10/11/2021, 09:55 PM
© Reuters.

By Gina Lee

Investing.com – Asia Pacific stocks were down on Tuesday morning, with China potentially widening a crackdown on private industry and continuing concerns about elevated inflation thanks to increasing energy costs.

The benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury yield was little changed as the cash market reopened from a U.S. holiday.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 0.88% by 9:49 PM ET (1:49 AM GMT). South Korea’s KOSPI slid 1.44%, with the Bank of Korea keeping its interest rate unchanged at 0.75% as it handed down its policy decision earlier in the day.

In Australia, the ASX 200 was down 0.35% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 1.10%.

China’s Shanghai Composite was down 0.53% and the ShenzhenComponent was down 0.32%. The mood was bleak as a report suggested China is widening scrutiny of private industry by examining ties to state banks. Some holders of two China Evergrande Group (HK:3333) are also yet to receive payment for two U.S. dollar bonds with coupons due Monday, and the developer’s debt woes continue.

Meanwhile, China will release trade and inflation data later in the week.

A continuous global energy crunch trimmed oil’s recent gains, while also driving aluminum prices to a 13-year high. Investor concerns over inflation that is being driven by the energy crunch and COVID-19-induced supply chain snafus impacting company profits and economic recovery continue to persist. However, some investors were optimistic about financial firms’ third-quarter earnings season that will kick off this week.

“We expect third-quarter earnings to be very, very strong. But it’s that forward look into the fourth quarter and 2022 that has everyone on edge,” RiverFront Investment Group senior market strategist Rebecca Felton told Bloomberg.

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Investors also await U.S. data, including the consumer and producer price indexes, due later in the week. The data is likely to shape the U.S. Federal Reserve’s timeline for asset tapering and interest rate hikes.

“Upcoming data releases could spur added stagflation concerns. In particular, September CPI inflation could be higher than expected and retail sales lower,” Standard Chartered (OTC:SCBFF) Plc head of global G10 FX research and North America macro strategy Steve Englander said in a note.

Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic will speak later in the day, and the Fed will also release the minutes from its latest meeting on Wednesday.

Latest comments

Chinese Japanese dirty knees oh damn my cryptocurrency disappeared wait a minute it's back F1 cir alt delete up up down down left right left right a b a b start
Than there is this Black Monday coming soon, although this event happened in 1987 but, well, the world financial markets likes to use this tool as an excuse or reminder to the public. To me, it happened in 1987, when technology wasn't that intelligent, but, in this era now, it should be well prepared. Traders need to have an excuse to short markets, every reasons to sell, to borrow scrips to short markets, that's the way banks, financial houses earn. lol Buy at dips, hold for returns, as I have always mentioned, Fear is good, Fear is opportunities. Good luck, take care and stay safe, healthy wherever you are, wear a mask when outdoors. That Covid-19 is even more scary than financial markets. lol
My observance for the last few months of what's going on in China & suddenly so many negative news about China and businesses there, i.e. the RMB (Chinese Yuan) has been stregthening  against the USD, plus China started selling a hefty sum of USD Bonds, foreign traders get panic. In the past, where traders & investors can only trade China Companies' equities in HongKong Hang Seng, most trades are arbitrage Hang Seng HKD against Shanghai & Shenzhen stock exchanges, RMB against HKD. This trick has been used for years, after the Asian Financial Crisis in the mid 90s, I guess Asian economies grew stronger, smarter & protecting leverages of Financial markets. Well, good luck!
Actually a lot of people outside China doesn't really understand what's going on with Evergrande crisis. Financial markets going negative is more of what's going on in US rather than Asia Pacific. All these years it's all about US rather than the rest of the world. Coming back to Evergrande, well, what's going on in there doesn't & will never affect outside China. It's quite complicated for the outside world to understand. The failures & crisis going on in Evergrande is within China itself, as Evergrande has nothing outside China, most of the properties investments are contained within China, even the bonds issued. it's not even in HongKong. Read the history to understand the whole picture, rather than writing with words like, I predict, I presume, I guess, I think, I project, all these are just own findings. Even people, investors, public doesn't really know or understand what's going on in Evergrande. There's no real answers, only the top officials of China will know what is going on.
They gonna recall all US investment toi!!!!!! All the markets gonna crash soon !!!
Evergrande- China contagion will hit everywhere. Just like their virus.
Its the canary in the coal mine
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