Stocks plummet as COVID-19 spreads across Asia and Europe

Business & Technology

corona 3

The China Project illustration by Derek Zheng

The COVID-19 outbreak reached its peak in China last week, at least according to government numbers, although the official numbers of infections and deaths continue to increase steadily. Beijing is also dialing up the propaganda in an attempt to build confidence in the central leadership.

But today โ€œwas an ugly day on Wall Streetโ€ย according to CNBCย (February 24). โ€œThe Dow closed down more than 1,000 points, its worst day since February 2018. The other major indexes all closed down more than 3% each.โ€

Until this weekend, investors had shrugged off the threat of the COVID-19 epidemic. A week ago, no countries other than China and Japanย โ€” where a single cruise ship became a hotbed for hundreds of COVID-19 cases โ€” had more than 100 infections.

But fears of a pandemic animated the markets today.ย Besides that cruise ship where over 600 were infected and three have died, South Korea has now reportedย over 800 infections, Italy has 230, Japan has 159, and over 50 cases and 12 deathsย were reported in Iran.

See also Hong Kong stocks tumble as virus cases spiral outside China, in Nikkei Asian Review (porous paywall).

Impact on Chinaโ€™s economy

Chinaโ€™s top leader Xรญ Jรฌnpรญngย ไน ่ฟ‘ๅนณ admitted yesterday, per the SCMP, that the COVID-19 epidemic would have a โ€œconsiderable impact of the Chinese economy and society,โ€ though he insisted that โ€œthe fundamentals of Chinaโ€™s long-term economic growth have not changed, and the impact of the epidemic is short term and overall controllable.โ€

Others are not as optimistic. See, for example, ย this Wall Street Journal reportย (paywall) that begins:

The Chinese economyโ€™s quick return to normal will hinge largely on how migrant workers such as Zhang Hua choose between two bad options: Stay in their hometowns without jobs, or return to cities where they face a 14-day coronavirus quarantine before being allowed back to workโ€ฆ

Chinaโ€™s transport minister recently said fewer than one-third of the countryโ€™s 291 million migrant workers, or people from rural areas who work in cities, had returned to their jobs as of February 14. He said another 120 million should return by the end of February, while the remaining 100 million would return in March.

Chinese companies hoping to reopenย after the COVID-19 shutdown are also facing a barrage of administrative paperworkย before they can get the all clear from the government.

Confusion in Wuhan and repression of critical voices

While the leaders in Beijing try to project calm, citizens living in the epidemic epicenter in Wuhan are receiving mixed messages. The South China Morning Post reportsย that โ€œjust three hours after announcing that visitors trapped in Wuhanโ€ฆcould leave on Monday, authorities reversed the decision, saying it had been made without approval.โ€ The city has also โ€œintroducedย 14 daysโ€™ mandatory quarantine for recovered coronavirus patients, after some discharged patients again tested positive.โ€

Authorities have also cracked downย on anyone questioning their approach. Police have detained Xว” Zhรฌyว’ng ่ฎธๅฟ—ๆฐธ, โ€œa prominent activist and legal scholar who issued a blistering attack on president Xi Jinping for mishandling the coronavirus crisis amid.โ€ Law professor Xว” Zhฤngrรนn ่ฎธ็ซ ๆถฆ, who also published a public critique of Xi, was placed under house arrest for days and is now barred from the internet. At least two citizen journalists in Wuhan are reportedly detained.

Ban on wildlife trade

Finally, a bit of good news: โ€œChina said it will ban the trade and consumption of wild animalsโ€ฆas part of efforts to curb virus outbreaks,โ€ the SCMP reports.