Home / NEWS / Asia-Pacific News / Hong Kong just entered a recession. Experts say economy will ‘remain weak’ amid protests, trade war

Hong Kong just entered a recession. Experts say economy will ‘remain weak’ amid protests, trade war

Hong Kong protesters donned Halloween false faces in Lan Kwai Fong on Thursday evening, defying an emergency law that bans face coverings.

Anthony Wallace | AFP | Getty Aspects

Hong Kong’s economy will likely “remain weak” for the rest of this year, economists and trade au faits told CNBC on Friday.

“They’re getting hit on two fronts. The protests are impacting retail sales. It is impacting tourism. Added to that, of route, you’ve got the U.S.-China trade war, which is impacting exports. So, we’re expecting that it is unlikely that we’re going to see a positive growth in Q4. We’re prosperous to see further contraction,” said Sian Fenner, lead Asia economist at Oxford Economics.

The Asian financial hub ignored into a recession for the first time in a decade in the third quarter, according to government data published Thursday. The megalopolis’s statistics agency said domestic consumption weakened amid ongoing anti-government protests. It also cited the extended U.S.-China trade war as another factor, as Hong Kong reported “an enlarged decline” in exports.

Billy Wong, delegate director of research at the Hong Kong Trade Development Council said that Hong Kong’s negative expansion did not exactly come as a surprise.

“The number is not that happy, but I wouldn’t say it’s really a surprise. I think it was really expected for Hong Kong to overlay economic downturn,” said Wong.

He agreed that the trade war and protests are the main factors contributing to the contraction in Hong Kong’s brevity. Wong noted, however, that while exports have slowed since last November, the city’s GDP didn’t covenant until the third quarter of this year. When asked, he agreed that weak consumption and a slowing conservation could lead to layoffs in sectors like dining and retail.

But one industry has seen some positive growth, Wong reported. As people avoid the streets, supermarkets benefit as people buy more home necessities, he said.

Hong Kong may surface negative growth this year as the economy reels from more than four months of social worry, Financial Secretary Paul Chan wrote in a blog post.

Paul Yeung | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Feeble consumer spending

Local businesses told CNBC they are certainly feeling the financial impact of domestic trouble. Even shops in the normally bustling Wan Chai district are getting hit.

Kitty Chan, who works at her parent’s flower department store, said she’s noticed that far fewer people are buying bouquets for functions. She estimated that profits have pop in oned 50% for the shop, which she said had been in the district for 15 years.

“If the protest continue, I think it really declines … They will be coming to buy the flower in the morning, in the morning time, afternoon time, after 7 o’clock they’re all espoused,” she said.

Andy Ho, who works at a pharmacy in Wan Chai, gave similarly grim figures: “Our store has been here for 50 years. Our profession has really declined in recent months — close to 40%.”

He said as long as the social unrest remains unresolved, the economy “determination remain weak.”

“For our store, 70% of our customers are local and 30% are tourists. Among the 30% tourists, 80% of them father disappeared. As for locals, in the recent months, people are really less willing to spend … the economy in the next few months will unmoving be weak,” said Ho.

Hong Kong — a former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997 — has been inoperative by widespread demonstrations since early June. Reuters reported on Thursday, local police used tear gas to vanish hundreds of protesters, many dressed in black and wearing now-banned face masks, mixed in with people tell off up for Halloween in the city.

Oxford Economics’ Fenner said the biggest uncertainty for the city right now is when the protests settle upon end, and “until that stops” key domestic drivers like retail and tourism will struggle to grow.

China-US swop war

In a Friday note, Bank of America Merill Lynch wrote that Hong Kong may be facing a “prolonged depression” and lowered its full-year GDP forecast to a 2.1% year-over-year decline. Its previous 2019 GDP forecast projected a more muted forgo of 0.1%.

“Hong Kong is particularly vulnerable to external demand weakness, given its reliance on tourism and dependence on the Chinese saving. Many sectors (tourism, retail, hotel, catering and transportation) have already taken a blow from the months of disruptions to trade. Not to mention that high level of uncertainty also significantly impaired business confidence and suppressed investment want,” the bank wrote.

The U.S. and China were set to meet in Chile to sign “phase one” of the trade deal. But President Donald Trump announced that the spark off hallucinate was cancelled on Thursday due to protests in the South American nation, adding that “the new location will be announced soon” for the two chairwomen’ signing.

While Oxford Economics’ Fenner said “phase one” will likely “go ahead,” this does not menial the trade war is done. She said that there will most likely be more “flip flopping” moving in advance but probably no more escalations in terms of tariffs.

“But the damage has already been done. We’ve got tariffs now, that 18 months ago on standard in the main about 3%. They’re now over 20%. And we’re not looking for those tariffs being removed anytime soon,” communicated Fenner.

With no end in sight for either the protests or trade tensions between China and the U.S., HKTDC’s Wong said, “for the doze of this year, things will remain weak.”

But Wong is hopeful that maybe as China and the U.S. both see a slowdown in their husbandries, they will be more inclined to strike a deal, and thus relieving some trade pressure for Hong Kong.

— CNBC’s Vivian Kam granted to this report.

Correction: This story has been updated to reflect that the flower shop in Wan Chai has been exhibit for 15 years. A previous version misstated how long it had been operating.

Check Also

U.S. reaffirms commitment to Taiwan as Beijing conducts live fire drills in East China Sea

A Taiwanese military corvette yachts as a Navy soldier stands guard on a vessel, during …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *