TikTok seeks to temporarily block the removal of its app from U.S. stores. Ant Group files for a Hong Kong share sale. Asian equities face a down day after Fed’s Powell says he needs more stimulus. Here are some of the things people in markets are talking about today.
1. TikTok Fights Back
TikTok’s owner asked a federal judge to temporarily block the Trump administration from removing the viral video-sharing network from U.S. app stores. TikTok faces a deadline this weekend to get a sale of its U.S. operations approved or face a de facto ban in the U.S., stemming from an Aug. 6 executive order by President Donald Trump. Wednesday’s request for a preliminary injunction — filed by Chinese company ByteDance — challenges new U.S. Commerce Department rules that would remove TikTok from app stores starting this month and require changes to its core functionality that the company says would effectively shut it down in the U.S. by mid-November. ByteDance asked for a court hearing before the rules take effect at 11:59 p.m. on Sept. 27 and proposed that both sides file additional briefs this week.
2. Ant’s Hong Kong IPO
Jack Ma’s Ant Group is aiming to raise $17.5 billion in its Hong Kong share sale and won’t seek to lock in cornerstone investors, confident there will be plenty of demand for one of the largest equity deals in the financial hub, according to people familiar with the matter. The fintech giant has assessed investor interest, betting it can pull off the Hong Kong portion of the initial public offering without the cornerstone investors that are often needed for large deals, according to the people. Ant is leaning toward inviting these big investors for the Shanghai sale to mitigate price fluctuations, the people said, asking not to be identified because the matter is private. The Hangzhou-based firm is planning to issue new stock equal to about 11% to 15% of the shares outstanding and split the float evenly between Hong Kong and Shanghai, the people added. Ant is mulling what could be the world’s largest IPO, seeking to raise about $35 billion in the dual listing at a valuation of about $250 billion, people familiar have said.
3. Market Open
Asian stocks were on course for declines after warnings from Federal Reserve officials on the need for more stimulus pushed U.S. equities to an eight-week low. The dollar extended this week’s gains. Futures in Japan and Hong Kong retreated, while S&P 500 futures opened little changed. The benchmark is now down almost 10% from its recent high and fell another 2.4% Wednesday. Treasuries were little changed. The caution comes as virus cases tick higher in the U.S. and other parts of the world. Traders are losing faith in the strength of the economic recovery, with the chances for Congressional stimulus withering ahead of a contentious election battle. Global equities are on course for the first monthly slide since March. Oil declined.
4. Grounded
Airlines have felt the pain of the coronavirus pandemic more than other companies. Almost overnight the bulk of their business ceased. Now, almost eight months into the pandemic, with cities reentering lockdown and a vaccine likely months away, it’s apparent there will be no quick comeback. International air traffic in July was 92% below 2019 levels, and there was little sign of improvement in August, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA). More than 400,000 airline jobs have been cut since February, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “This is lasting longer and is deeper than most people thought,” says Scott Kirby, chief executive officer of United Airlines. “And our view is demand is not coming back. People are not going to get back and travel like they did before until there’s a vaccine that’s been widely distributed.”
5. Hedge Funds’ Windfall
A few Asia-based hedge funds benefited from early insight into the pandemic’s impact to post outsized gains this year, while regional peers are on track to outperform global funds for the eighth time in 12 years. Funds overseen by Anatole Investment , Aspex Management, CloudAlpha Capital and Franchise Capital returned more than 50% this year to the end of August, making money on bets ranging from electric cars to e-commerce, while some shorted hard-hit tourism sectors. Proximity to China, the initial epicenter of the Covid-19 outbreak, gave the funds a vantage point to see how the pandemic would play out elsewhere. Even before March, the four firms gravitated toward technology and e-commerce — industries that have been bolstered by the virus. The flexibility to join attractively priced private deals also helped them beat the 23% advance of the MSCI World Growth Index.
Source: Bloomberg
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