KEY POINTS
  • Almost three years of lockdown measures have dragged down the Chinese economy and pushed youth unemployment to nearly 20%.
  • UBS strategists noted that a widening of infections could exacerbate global supply chain interruptions and cause domestic headwinds to spill into global markets.
  • "While the setback to sentiment from protests in mainland and tightening of Covid restrictions in several cities are unlikely to bode well for sentiment, we are cautious not to interpret these as overly bearish," strategists at Citi said in a note Monday.
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2022. 

Global stocks pulled back on Monday after rare protests erupted across China over the weekend amid growing unrest over the country's zero-Covid policy.

An apparent easing earlier this month had fueled hopes of a gradual easing of the country's strict Covid controls. However, local lockdowns in recent days in response to surging infections have seen fears resurface over both the domestic economic recovery and global supply chains.