The threat of U.S. sanctions against Turkey. Political turmoil in Peru and Ecuador. Election risks in Poland and Hungary. A change of direction at South Africa’s Eskom.

The list of worries hanging over emerging markets is about as long as it’s been at any time this year. Yet it’s a measure of the current mindset that trade, rather than any or all of those idiosyncratic concerns, will be the biggest focus this week as Friday’s partial agreement between the U.S. and China provides a moment of comfort.

The relief might still be fleeting. Apart from the many unresolved issues in the negotiations, China’s own economic performance will be at the forefront of investor concerns. Though some economists say data on Friday will show Chinese growth slowed to below 6% in the third quarter -- a likely trigger to a selloff across emerging markets -- the median forecast is still 6.1%.

“China’s economic stabilization is more important than the partial trade deal –- it provides some support to EM markets and lessens China’s motivation for a broader trade deal with the U.S,” James McCormick, global head of strategy at NatWest Markets Plc in London, wrote in a report. “The message will be an economy that continues to slow but is stabilizing on the back of targeted stimulus efforts.”

The yuan reached its strongest level in almost two months after China’s central bank kept its currency fix flat. That was even as data showed Chinese exports and imports shrank more than expected in September. The country is scheduled to publish inflation data on Tuesday. Industrial production and retail sales numbers are due on Friday.

Vulnerable Lira

Eskom Anxieties

Poland and Hungary Vote

Data and Decision

This article provided by Bloomberg News.