HONG KONG, July 23 — Stocks were mixed today as investors juggled hopes for a new stimulus deal in Washington with coronavirus concerns and another flare-up between China and the United States.

Optimism over the development of a vaccine and a wall of government and central bank cash is providing much-needed support to equities as traders fret over a spike in new infections around the world and the reimposition of containment measures in key economies.

European leaders lifted sentiment this week when they finally agreed on an US$860 billion (RM3.7 trillion) rescue package for the eurozone, putting the focus on US lawmakers, with their earlier multi-trillion-dollar programme — which gives cash to households — about to wind down.

Republicans have been struggling to come up with a bill to counter a US$3.5 trillion Democrat proposal, fanning concerns they will not come up with anything ahead of an August break.

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However, reports said Mitch McConnell would soon unveil a US$1 trillion plan after overcoming some differences with the White House.

Analysts said that while it may take some time, a package is expected to be ready for Donald Trump to sign off, with no one wanting to be seen to deny money to the poorest ahead of a general election.

Indications a deal could be done helped Wall Street into positive territory, with dealers also cheered by an announcement from German firm BioNTech and Pfizer that the government had agreed to pay almost US$2 billion for 100 million doses of a potential vaccine if regulatory approval is granted.

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‘School-yard bullies’

Hong Kong and Mumbai each rose 0.7 per cent, while Sydney gained 0.3 per cent, Singapore climbed 0.9 per cent and Jakarta put on 0.6 per cent.

But Shanghai fell 0.2 per cent, though well off its earlier lows of more than one per cent, while Seoul, Taipei, Wellington and Manila were also down.

In early trade, London, Paris and Frankfurt rose.

Washington and Beijing added to the long list of issues they have butted heads over when the US ordered the closure of the Chinese consulate in Houston within 72 hours.

That came a day after two Chinese nationals were indicted for allegedly hacking hundreds of companies worldwide seeking to steal vaccine research.

China slammed the US move, and threatened retaliation, while Trump said “it’s always possible” more consulates could be closed.

“The escalation in US-China tensions is a reminder of the headline risk faced by investors during the upcoming US election campaign,” said AxiCorp’s Stephen Innes.

“The US and China have become increasingly combative in their views this year. The markets better get used to it because there is more of that to come and even without Trump in the White House.”

However, he added: “So long as the deteriorating political scrim does not drive economic fragmentation between the world’s largest economies, the political bruhaha remains a tempest in a teapot.”

And OANDA’s Jeffrey Halley said: “Overall, the announcement is not a game-changer in the medium to longer-term. Financial markets have for some time been building up herd immunity to constant quarrels of the two school-yard bullies”.

Investors are awaiting the release later in the day of US unemployment claims, which will provide a snapshot of the world’s top economy in light of the reimposed containment measures around the country. — AFP