HONG KONG, June 1 — Hong Kong led an Asia-wide market rally today as investors breathed a sigh of relief after Donald Trump fell short of imposing strict measures against China, while a further easing of virus lockdowns continued to provide support.

However, violent anti-racism protests across the US have fuelled worries of a pick-up in Covid-19 infections and more pain for the world’s top economy, just as it prepares to ease restrictions.

Dealers had sold up ahead of a news conference Trump called regarding China’s plan for a new security law in Hong Kong but his actions were not as severe as feared.

The president said he would strip several of the city’s special privileges and bar some Chinese students from US universities, and he ordered probes into Chinese companies listed on US financial markets.

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“Importantly... there were no new tariffs or broad sanctions, with the phase one trade deal intact, with the outcome less feared,” said National Australia Bank’s Tapas Strickland.

“Some are drawing the link between President Trump’s need for agricultural buys to shore up the Midwest ahead of the November presidential elections.”

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index jumped more than three per cent, having spiralled last month after China proposed the new law, which some fear could lead to the end of the city as a key financial hub.

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The news conference “was long on criticism of China but short on action”, said AxiCorp’s Stephen Innes.

“Most economists think the direct impact of revoking Hong Kong’s special customs status and more export controls will likely be limited, as Hong Kong will remain a free port, and its exports to the US account for less than 0.1 per cent of gross domestic product.”

US protest concerns

Tokyo ended 0.8 per cent higher, while Shanghai and Singapore were up more than two per cent, with Sydney, Seoul, Taipei, Manila and Bangkok more than one  per cent higher. Mumbai gained 3.5 per cent.

In early trade, London and Paris rose more than one per cent. Frankfurt was closed for a holiday.

The gradual lifting of lockdowns around the world is also adding to the optimistic tone on trading floors, with cafes and bars beginning to open for the start of summer.

But six days of violent demonstrations by thousands of people against police brutality in the United States have raised worries that infections could spike again, while curfews have been imposed in Washington DC and other major US cities to prevent fresh rioting.

Yesterday night, police fired tear gas to try to disperse protesters outside the White House.

“The reopening could be disrupted and that can affect local state economies that just began to emerge from the pandemic,” Ben Emons, at Medley Global Advisors, said.

The more upbeat mood among investors put pressure on the safe-haven dollar, which dropped more than one per cent against the Australian dollar, while South Korea’s won climbed 0.8 per cent and the Mexican peso jumped 0.7 per cent.

But David Madden at CMC Markets warned further upheaval could still be on the cards.

“Just because Donald Trump didn’t go head to head with the Chinese government over trade, doesn’t mean he won’t at a later date,” he said in a note. “After all, he has an election to contest at the back end of the year, so he might turn on China then to try and score political points.”

Observers are keeping tabs on the release later in the week of key US jobs data that will provide a fresh snapshot of the economic damage inflicted by the shutdowns.

On Thursday, the European Central Bank is tipped to unveil hundreds of billions in new bond-buying to get the region through the pandemic crisis, just as EU leaders try to hammer out a joint response. — AFP