After weeks of escalated tension, the Chinese government is seemingly concerned about the current trend of the global stock market.

  • In a sudden u-turn, China pledged to implement the phase one trade deal signed with the U.S.
  • As the global stock market feels the strain of economic decline, governments are rushing to deescalate tension.
  • Chinas difficult decision shows the global economy is highly fragile.

After weeks of escalated tension, the Chinese government is seemingly concerned about the current trend of the global stock market.
Chinas Premier Li Keqiang reaffirmed at the annual meeting of lawmakers called Two Sessions 2020 that the country will adhere to the phase one trade deal signed with the U.S.
He told lawmakers:
We will work with the United States to implement the phase one China-U.S. economic and trade agreement. China will continue to boost economic and trade cooperation with other countries to deliver mutual benefits.
A declining economy, rattled investors in the stock market, and disruptions in international supply chains are putting pressure on China and wider Asian economy.
Chinas stock market re-enters a steep downtrend | Source: Yahoo Finance
China is Trying to Prevent a Stock Market Collapse
Since mid-April, the U.S. has placed immense pressure on China with regards to the origin of coronavirus.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on multiple occasions that the government has sufficient evidence to consider the Wuhan Laboratory as a potential source of the virus.
As tensions escalated, President Trump claimed the U.S. is ready to cut ties with China. In response, the Chinese government said it would focus on building a self-sustainable domestic economy.
China reaffirmed its pledge to make the phase 1 U.S. trade deal work, despite escalating tensions with Trumps White House. | Source: GREG BAKER / AFP
The surprising pledge of China to implement the phase one trade deal shows even the second biggest economy in the world cannot dismiss the potential effect of the pandemic on the stock market.
The Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank (ECB), and other major central banks across Europe and Asia can only boost the economy on paper for so long.
Cracks are beginning to emerge and for China, at least, its just starting.
Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist for Capital Economics, said in a study that slowing factory output of China is expected to decline even further in 2020.
The majority of factories in China have reopened as the government eased coronavirus lockdown measures. But, the countrys industrial output dropped from nearly 24% in 2005 to merely 3.9% in 2020.
Even if industry output continues to increase, it poses a unique problem | Source: Andrew Batson
The stock market does not accurately reflect the state of the economy. The strong momentum of the U.S. stock market in the past two months proved that.
But, the economy of China and other major G20 countries like Japan and South Korea are degrading to a point in which the Chinese government is no longer willing to share economic data to the public.
The confidence of institutional investors in the recovery of the stock market may decline, as billionaires increasingly hedge their positions in the market.
Solutions Other Than Aggressive Fiscal Policies Needed
The Federal Reserve is continuing to guarantee enough liquidity in the market. For now, that is keeping the U.S. stock market afloat despite unemployment claims surpassing 36 million.
The Feds aggressive actions single-handedly led to a rapid stock market recovery. But, if there are no new buyers coming in, the market is at risk of seeing a steep correction.
To maintain a sustainable stock market rebound, measures that could improve the fundamentals of the economy are critical. Until then, the recovery of stocks will solely rely on the development of vaccines and the efforts of the Fed, which equate to a vulnerable rally.
Disclaimer: This article represents the authors opinion and should not be considered investment or trading advice from CCN.com. Unless otherwise noted, the author has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.
This article was edited by Samburaj Das.