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Here’s why the Hang Seng Index is falling after ceasefire extension

The Hang Seng Index sank by over 1.30% on Wednesday as concerns about the fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran continued. It retreated to $26,137, erasing some of the gains made a day earlier.

Hang Seng Index slips after Trump ceasefire extension 

President Donald Trump announced that he would extend the fragile ceasefire between his country and Iran after the latter remained non-committal on attending talks in Pakistan. Iran cited the ongoing blockade and argued that the talks would be meaningless.

In a statement, Trump cited the “fractured” Iranian government and plea from Pakistani officials on extending the ceasefire. In an earlier interview with CNBC, the president said that he would not extend the ceasefire.

Vice President JD Vance, Jared Kushner, a and Steve Witkoff were ready to travel to Pakistan for these talks and only canceled them as Iran remained muted on whether it would attend.

Iran believes that time is on its side as President Trump is already bored with the war and has midterm elections later this year. Chances are that the Republicans will lose the House of Representatives and the Senate, leading to his impeachment.

Iran also aims to prevent another attack by the US and Israel. As a result, while the war has caused thousands of deaths and destruction, the country believes that a prolonged war will prevent future attacks from happening.

Media reports have said that the only reason why Trump got into the war was that Benjamin Netanyahu and the head of Mossad convinced him of a short war that would lead to a regime change within hours.

The implication of the ceasefire extension is that crude oil priceswill remain at an elevated level for longer. Also, there is a risk that the US and Iran will restart the war, a phase that will be risky as it will focus on energy and civilian infrastructure.

The ongoing crisis is risky for China, a country that imports most of its energy from other countries in the Middle East. China, however, unlike other countries like South Korea and Japan, has more oil reserves, which has helped to offset the situation.

Most companies in the Hang Seng Index were in the red on Wednesday. New Oriental Education stock dropped by 5.25%, while Contemporary Amperex, JD Health, Laopu Gold, and Orient Overseas dropped by over 3.8%. Other top laggards were firms like Netease and Alibaba.

On the other hand, some of the top laggards were companies like Lenovo Group, Geely Automobile, PetroChina, and China Resources Power.

HSI Index technical analysis 

Hang Seng Index chart | Source: TradingView

The Hang Seng Index has rebounded in the past few weeks, moving from a low of $24,225 on March 24 to a high of H$26,480 on Tuesday.

It has now pulled back to $26,130, which is slightly above the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level. It remains slightly above the 50-day and 100-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMA), while the Supertrend indicator has turned green.

Therefore, the most likely scenario is where the index resumes the uptrend and possibly retests the important resistance level at $27,000. A move above that price will point to more gains towards the year-to-date high of $27,960.

The post Here’s why the Hang Seng Index is falling after ceasefire extension appeared first on Invezz

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