China Corporates - Under Pressure
17 November 2020
U.S. President Trump’s ban and local default headlines weigh on Chinese corporates. Poland and Hungary threaten to veto disbursements from the EU recovery fund.
President Trump’s ban on investing in 31 Chinese companies with alleged military ties continues to weigh on the market sentiment this morning (but not on the currency), reflecting concerns that it might be followed by further last-minute restrictions before the president leaves office in January 2021. Local headlines about corporate defaults – including State Owned Enterprises (SOE) – add an extra layer of concerns. Allowing companies to default is not necessarily a bad sign, as it helps price discovery and improves transparency. In the case of SOEs, it can also reduce pressure on the government’s fiscal accounts. However, financial stability considerations are also important, which is why regulators are looking into this right now.
The rule of law mechanism is back in focus in Central Europe. Earlier this week, Poland and Hungary threatened to veto the EU recovery fund (EUR750B) unless the European Commission removes the rule of law conditionality on the EU structural funds, which Poland and Hungary consider an interference into domestic affairs. Europe clearly does not think so, but the row might delay the recovery fund disbursements to Spain, Greece, Italy and Portugal, which were badly affected by the virus. Germany is trying to broker a deal, and we should hear more on this issue on Thursday.
Peru has got its third President within the past two weeks. The country continues to move down the “succession line”, following the surprising impeachment of President Vizcarra and the resignation of interim President Merino after six days in the office. The new interim president is Francisco Sagasti, who is relatively new in politics and usually associated with the technocratic/academic crowd. The market reaction has been positive – in part because the appointment can improve the chances of a moderate candidate in the 2021 presidential election.
Related Insights
07 April 2025
06 March 2025
20 February 2025
16 January 2025
07 April 2025
Trump’s tariffs spark trade war fears, fueling market volatility, inflation risk, and recession threats. With global retaliation likely, near-term growth is clearly at risk.
06 March 2025
Trump’s tariffs, AI’s next phase, and a potential U.S. gold revaluation could shake markets—investors who stay ahead of these transitions will be best positioned.
20 February 2025
China's AI breakthrough, persistent inflation, gold’s outperformance, and rising energy demand underscore a shifting investment landscape.
16 January 2025
In 2025, navigating turbulence means balancing tech innovation, inflation hedges, energy shifts, and risks from spending cuts and inflation.
05 December 2024
"Trump Trade 2.0" fueled U.S. equity and digital asset rallies, while real assets faltered under a strong dollar, with global markets reacting unevenly to pro-growth policies.