Asian share markets fought to regain their footing on Friday as investors clutched at hopes China could contain the coronavirus, even as headlines spoke of more cases and mounting deaths.
Helping the mood were surveys showing Chinese manufacturing activity came in much as expected in January while services actually firmed, though this was likely before the virus took full hold.
Indeed, reports some Chinese provinces were asking companies not to re-start until February 10 suggested activity would take a hard knock this month.
For now, sentiment got a timely boost when Amazon's sales blew past forecasts and sent its stock soaring 11% after hours, adding over $100 billion in market worth.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan managed to eke out a 0.2 percent gain but was still down 4 percent on the week so far. It is 2.3 percent dive on Thursday had been the sharpest one-day loss in six months.
Japan's Nikkei bounced one percent but again was off 2.5 percent for the week. E-Mini futures for the S&P 500 added 0.1 percent, having rebounded 0.5 percent late on Thursday.
European bourses looked set to open firmer with EUROSTOXX 50 futures up 0.8 percent and the FTSE 0.7 percent.
The World Health Organization on Thursday declared a global emergency as the virus spread to more countries.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, said the greatest worry was the potential for the virus to spread to countries with weaker health systems.
Yet investors took heart from his comments that the drastic steps Beijing was taking would "reverse the tide" and contain the outbreak.
"Some shorts covered after the director gave the WHO's stamp of approval to China's aggressive containment effort," said Stephen Innes, Asia Pacific market strategist at AxiCorp.
Questions about rising market risk
"For now, the market's risk lights have shifted from flickering on red to a steady shade of amber, which could bring more risk back into play."
That helped Wall Street recoup its losses so the Dow finished up 0.43 percent, while the S&P 500 gained 0.31 percent and the Nasdaq 0.26 percent. After the bell, NASDAQ futures pushed 1.3 percent higher on the Amazon results.
Still, the flow of news on the virus remained bleak with China's Hubei province reporting deaths from the disease had risen by 42 to 204 as of the end of Jan. 30.
More airlines curtailed flights into and out of China and companies temporarily closed operations, while the U.S. State Department told citizens not to travel to any part of China.
JPMorgan shaved its forecast for global growth by 0.3 percent points for this quarter to reflect the growing impact.
"Based on the patterns observed from other epidemics, we assume that the outbreak will likely run its course over 2-3 months, meaning the hit to activity happens in the current quarter" JPMorgan analysts said in a note.
"Also in line with historical experience, we expect full recovery to follow."
BONDS CAN'T BE BEAT
The drumbeat of bad news kept safe-haven bonds well bid, with yields on US 10-year Treasuries down nine basis points for the week so far and near four-month lows.
The yield curve between three-month bills and 10-year notes had also inverted twice this week, a bearish economic signal.
In currencies, sterling held firm after jumping on Thursday when the Bank of England confounded market expectations by not cutting interest rates.
The pound was last at $1.3096, a relatively calm performance given Friday is the day the UK officially leaves the European Union after years of political turmoil.
The dollar took a knock overnight when data showed the U.S. economy grew at its slowest annual pace in three years and personal consumption weakened sharply.
Yet it was up a fraction on the yen on Friday at 109.07. The euro held at $1.1025, while the dollar was steady on a basket of currencies at 97.923.
Most of the action this week has been nervous investors selling emerging currencies for dollars and yen, leaving the majors little changed against each other.
Spot gold was only a shade firmer for the week at $1,572.11 per ounce, having failed to get much of a safe-haven bid as a range of other commodities, from copper to soybeans, were hammered by worries over Chinese demand.
Oil bounced on short-covering, after hitting its lowest in three months as the global spread of the coronavirus threatened to curb demand for fuel.
US crude regained $1.11 to $53.25 a barrel, while Brent crude futures rose 90 cents to $59.19.