European Open: China Helps Markets With A Liquidity Boost

 | Feb 03, 2020 02:49AM ET

h2 China shares slide to 8-month low/h2

China markets played catch-up as they reopened after a week-long break. The China50 index fell to the lowest since June 6 last year, extending the latest decline to a third day. Chinese authorities had announced a slew of measures over the weekend aimed at supporting markets. 1.2 trillion yuan ($171 billion) of liquidity was added to local markets, while the 7-day and 14-day reverse repo rates at this morning’s market operations were trimmed by 10 bps to 2.40% and 2.55%, respectively.

In addition, banks were told to lend more and not call in loans to companies in Hubei province and other affected regions, while night trading sessions for futures were suspended. Some share pledge contracts were allowed to be extended while asset-management rules were also relaxed.

h3 Other shares have technical rebound/h3

US indices recovered slightly from Friday’s sell-off, rising between 0.40% and 0.49%, with the NAS100 index out-performing, while Japan and Hong Kong indices both rallied more than 0.9%.

USD/JPY also recovered, rising for the first time in four days and regaining the 200-day moving average at 108.45. GBP/USD fell for the first time in three days after it was reported Boris Johnson plans to walk away from talks about the relationship between the UK and the EU if he doesn’t get the deal he wants.

h3 USD/JPY Daily Chart/h3