Asian equities head for weekly loss as short-squeeze nerves persist

Singapore/New York — Asian stock markets recovered on Friday but are headed for their steepest weekly loss in months, as a liquidity squeeze in China and a Wall Street retail-trading frenzy has unnerved investors.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.9, but is headed for a weekly loss of more than 3%, the sharpest such fall since September.

Japan’s Nikkei was steady but tracking towards its first weekly loss of 2021, having fallen 1.5% since last Friday.

Safe-haven US Treasuries sold off overnight and the US dollar softened a fraction with a broader improvement in risk appetite, however S&P 500 futures fell 0.4% in Asia trading.

“I’m definitely seeing the nerves,” said Chris Weston, head of research at Melbourne broker Pepperstone. “Asia seems a bit unconvinced,” he said. “There’s a knock-on effect that happens from targeting hedge funds, and this could have legs.”

Wall Street has been gripped by a co-ordinated assault on hedge-fund short positions by small traders organising over online forums such as Reddit.

They lost some of their firepower overnight when brokers cut off leverage and restricted trading in some of the hottest names such as GameStop and BlackBerry.

The boss of popular online broker Robinhood said the curbs were deployed to protect the brokerage and its customers and that some restrictions will lift on Friday.

The surge in volatility comes just as Covid-19 vaccine rollouts have run into a bit of trouble and as global economic data starts to look less rosy.

Investors were still impressed by a smaller-than-expected rise in US weekly jobless claims overnight. But they rose by more than 840,000 and data showed the US economy contracted at its sharpest pace since World War 2 last year.

Vaccine production delays have also snowballed into a spat between the EU and drugmakers over how best to direct the limited supplies which are available.

Meanwhile in China, the central bank injected 100-billion yuan into the financial system on Friday after a week of sucking liquidity, which had put investors on edge as to whether the supportive policy environment could be shifting.

The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong opened 1% higher and the Shanghai Composite rose 0.6%, however both are on course for weekly losses of more than 2%.

“Fears of [People’s Bank of China] deleveraging could trigger the correction of China equities, and discourage capital inflow for China stock markets,” said Mizuho’s chief Asian FX strategist Ken Cheung.

The Chinese yuan firmed slightly in offshore trade to 6.4715/$. The euro was steady at $1.2114 and the dollar index, which traded in a range it has held for most of the month, sat at 90.621.

The yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasuries rose overnight and held at 1.0585% on Friday. Gold sat at $1,842/oz and oil prices were steady, with Brent crude futures last up 0.1% at $55.60 a barrel.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za