China
Shuts Down Stock
Market to Prevent
Coronavirus Selloff
Chinese
authorities have decided to suspend trading on the nation's two major
stock exchanges. This comes after fears of a coronavirus crash.
CCN,
28
January, 2020
- Chinese authorities have decided to suspend trading on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges.
-
This move comes as the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak grows in size and severity.
-
The government is kicking the can down the road. Investors can expect a massive correction when trading resumes next Monday.
China’s
financial markets will remain
shuttered until Feb. 3 due
to coronavirus fears, according to separate announcements from the
Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.
The
move comes as the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak grows in size and
severity with many
fearing it may lead to a global recession.
The
Chinese government may be trying to delay panic selling until it can
get the massive outbreak under control. But this strategy is unlikely
to work because of the sheer impact the virus is already having on
the nation’s economy. Investors can expect to see a large
correction in the Chinese indices when (and if) trading resumes next
Monday.
The
impact of this crisis is sure to bleed into American markets and may
trigger a stock market correction.
The
Wuhan Coronavirus Outbreak
Intensifies
Investors
should also watch for the market fallout over a
recent missile strike against the United States’ embassy in Iraq.
That situation, along with the ongoing crisis in China, could put
pressure on equity prices going forward. With all these black swans
hitting the market at once, there’s a growing fear that a major
economic downturn is around the corner.
It’s no secret, the Wuhan Coronavirus is getting worse. So far over 4,000 cases have been confirmed with 106 fatalities. There are over 50 cases outside of China, including five in the United States. Recently, Germany confirmed its first case of the disease bringing the total of infected countries to 16.
In
response to the threat, China has quarantined entire cities. The
travel restrictions affect a total population of 60 million people
and might be slowing economic activity to a halt in the affected
areas.
Data
from the first day of the Chinese New Year shows a
significant decline in travel across all major platforms.
There was a 41.6% decline in civil air travel, a 45.5% drop in rail
travel and a 25% drop in road travel. U.S-based companies with
Chinese subsidiaries are also scaling back their operations.
China Shuts Down The Market
In
response to the crisis, China has decided to extend
the Lunar New Year break on trading by
four days. This looks to be an attempt to prevent panic selling due
to the outbreak. However, the Feb. 3rd date for a resumption of
trading may be delayed because Shanghai authorities have separately
advised companies not to resume work until at least Feb. 9th.
Despite
the halt on trading, Chinese firms are still feeling the pain. The
U.S listed China Large-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA:FXI) dropped 4% on Monday.
Is The United States Next?
The
United States economy is on shaky footing going into 2020. America’s
economy is tightly intertwined with China’s, and a massive crash
there would have ripple effects across the world.
Companies
with significant exposure to China have already posted significant
declines with Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and American Airlines (NASDAQ:AAL)
down 3% and 8%, respectively.
Chinese
airlines are in free fall with U.S-listed China Southern Airlines
(NYSE:ZNH) and China Eastern Airlines (NYSE:CEA) both down over 7% on
the day.
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