Emerging-market stocks fell on Monday, after posting the longest streak of weekly gains since 2020, as President Donald Trump’s latest executive order deepened investor concerns over the economic showdown between the United States and China.
MSCI Inc.’s benchmark for emerging market (EM) equities dropped 0.7 per cent, after a 10 per cent rally in the past six weeks that was driven by bets that Chinese technology companies, especially Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., are making strides in artificial intelligence. That had taken the index’s valuation to a four-month high, positioning it near highs that have sparked selloffs over the past two years.
Over the weekend, Trump directed the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. to restrict Chinese spending on technology, energy and other strategic U.S. sectors, his administration’s latest salvo against the world’s second-largest economy. The administration also called on Mexican officials to place their own levies on Chinese imports and proposed fees on the use of commercial ships made in China.
While the flurry of executive orders narrowed the negotiating room for China over trade tariffs, the country also faced more urgent pressures on the domestic front. Tightening liquidity is leading to a surge in money-market rates, a squeeze worsened by local governments’ borrowing to replace off-balance sheet debt. Investors are fretting over signs that the People’s Bank of China is pausing accommodative measures and authorities aren’t following through on policy pledges.
“The primary reason for the recent selloff in Chinese bonds is the PBoC’s passive bearish aggression, which refers to the lack of monetary easing despite tight liquidity,” Societe Generale strategist Kiyong Seong wrote
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