Asian markets struggle for traction as trade concerns fester

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AFP, Hong Kong :
Asian markets were mixed Wednesday as investors grow nervous at the lack of news on China-US trade talks, with Washington yet to cancel tariffs on a swathe of Chinese goods planned for the weekend.
With negotiators still trying to hammer out a mini agreement, the mood on trading floors remains upbeat. Most observers have been confident the two sides will eventually reach a deal, feeding a global equities rally for weeks.
However, a fresh round of levies on $160 billion of Chinese exports to the US is due to be imposed on December 15, and there has been no word from the White House on a possible delay to that date.
The removal of tariffs is a key demand of Beijing’s in the talks.
And on Tuesday Donald Trump’s top economics adviser Larry Kudlow warned that the measures remained in play for now.
“The reality is that those tariffs are still on the table,” Kudlow said, although he did say that Donald Trump had struck a “constructive and optimistic tone” on China.
The uncertainty weighed on Wall Street, with all three main indexes edging down, and Asian dealers struggled for inspiration.
Tokyo ended the morning 0.2 percent lower, Hong Kong dipped 0.1 percent and Wellington shed 0.3 percent.
But Shanghai added 0.1 percent, while Sydney, Taipei and Singapore each rose 0.2 percent and Seoul gained 0.3 percent, as did Jakarta.
On currency markets the pound tumbled against the dollar after a fresh poll predicted Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s ruling Conservatives would win a much smaller majority than a previous projection.
The YouGov opinion poll said the Tories would win Thursday’s vote, with a majority of 28 seats, sharply down from the 68 forecast in a similar study at the end of November.
Sterling has surged in recent weeks – sitting at an eight-month high on the greenback and a two-and-a-half-year peak against the euro – on expectations Johnson would win a big enough majority to push through his Brexit deal.
But the narrowing polls point to the possibility of another hung parliament, which would lead to more uncertainty in Westminster and drag out the Britain-EU saga even longer.
“The margins are extremely tight and small swings in a small number of seats, perhaps from tactical voting and a continuation of Labour’s recent upward trend, means we can’t currently rule out a hung parliament,” YouGov political research manager Chris Curtis said.
“One thing’s for sure: when it comes to UK elections, and as history reminds us, it’s never over till it’s over,” said AxiTrader’s Stephen Innes.
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