Shares
advanced Monday in Europe and Asia after President Donald Trump issued
executive orders to provide tax relief and stopgap unemployment benefits
for Americans hit by the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic.
Investors
are watching for further developments on stimulus for the U.S. economy
and on trade tensions between Beijing and Washington. Trade talks are
planned for Friday, to be held virtually due to the coronavirus
pandemic.
Germany’s
DAX was flat at 12,673.25 while the CAC 40 in France added 0.5% to
4,911.65. Britain’s FTSE 100 picked up 0.3% to 6,050.82. The future for
the S&P 500 was flat, at 3,345.80 while the future contract for the
Dow industrials gained 0.2% to 27,389.00.
“It
has been an unusually risk-friendly start to the Monday proceedings,
but there is still a lot of wood to be chopped on the U.S. stimulus
deal, while Aug. 15 trade talks loom ominously,” Stephen Innes of
AxiCorp said in a commentary.
Stock
prices fell in Hong Kong after the authorities arrested pro-democracy
media tycoon Jimmy Lai and some of his associates on suspicion of
collusion with foreign powers.
The Hang Seng index dropped 0.6% to 24,377.43.
Lai
was arrested Monday under the city’s national security law and posts on
Twitter showed him being taken away by police, as dozens of uniformed
police searched the headquarters of his newspaper, Apple Daily.
The
national security law that came into effect June 30 is widely seen as a
means to curb dissent after anti-government protests rocked Hong Kong
last year. It has raised questions over whether and to what extent
Communist Party leaders in Beijing will respect the “one-party,
two-systems” arrangement promised to the former British colony for a
half-century after China took control of the semi-autonomous in 1997.
Elsewhere
in Asia, South Korea’s Kospi jumped 1.5% to 2,386.38 and the
S&P/ASX 200 in Australia surged 1.8% to 6,110.20. The Shanghai
Composite index advanced 0.8% to 3,379.25.
Shares also rose in Taiwan, India and Thailand.
China
reported its consumer price index rose to 2.7% in July from 2.5% in
June as flooding disrupted farming across much of the country, pushing
food prices higher. But producer prices and core inflation, which
exclude food and energy prices, fell to a ten-year low of 0.5%,
reflecting continued weakness amid the pandemic.
Sentiment
on Wall Street was lifted Friday by positive U.S. jobs data, with U.S.
employers adding nearly 1.8 million jobs last month, about 185,000 more
than economists had forecast.
The
S&P 500 inched up 0.1% to 3,351.28 to eke out a sixth straight gain
on Friday. It is within 1% of its record high set in February.
But
uncertainty overhangs the markets, with the total number of confirmed
coronavirus cases in the U.S. surpassing 5 million. Technology stocks
have taken a hit as investors fret that China could retaliate for
President Donald Trump’s latest escalation against Chinese tech
companies.
With
Republicans and Democrats in Congress reportedly far apart late last
week on stimulus legislation, Trump issued a set of four executive
orders.
They call for:
—Continued
payments of up to $400 a week of supplemental federal unemployment
benefits for millions of Americans out of work during the outbreak.
—A
payroll tax deferral that would allow employers to defer collecting the
employee portion of the payroll tax, including the 6.2% Social Security
tax on wages, effective Aug. 1 through the end of the year.
—The Treasury and Housing and Urban Development departments to find funds to help people struggling to pay their rent.
—Extension
of a moratorium on student loans backed by the federal government that
would have expired on Sept. 30 and that also forgave interest on the
deferred payments.
Analysts
questioned the impact of the orders, which appear certain to face legal
challenges. Democrats called the move a pre-election ploy that would
burden cash-strapped states, which may be expected to pick up more of
the tab for unemployment benefits.
Trump
issued the orders after congressional talks broke down. Democrats
initially sought a $3.4 trillion package, but said they lowered their
demand to $2 trillion. Republicans had proposed a $1 trillion plan.
Both
the White House and congressional Democrats indicated Sunday they
wanted to resume negotiations, but no talks were scheduled.
With
the Nov. 3 election approaching, the White House is nervously watching
signs that the economic recovery is slowing down as the coronavirus
surges.
In
other trading Monday, U.S. benchmark crude oil gained 62 cents to $41.84
per barrel. On Friday, it gave up 73 cents to $41.22 per barrel..
Brent crude, the international standard for pricing, added 47 cents to $44.87 per barrel.
The U.S. dollar rose to 105.96 Japanese yen from 105.92 yen. The euro slipped to $1.1772 from $1.1789.
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