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European shares plummet to 16-month low on trade war gloom

By Sukriti Gupta and Medha Singh


(Reuters) -European shares plunged to a 16-month low on Monday as investors grappled with the possibility of a recession after U.S. President Donald Trump showed no signs of letting up in his aggressive trade war.


The pan-European STOXX 600 slumped 5.8% at 0722 GMT, down for the fourth straight session and on track for its steepest one-day percentage decline since the COVID-19 pandemic.


Trade-sensitive Germany’s benchmark index dove 6.1%, among the worst hit markets in the euro area. At one point the index was down more than 20% from its March all-time closing high. The index would confirm it has been in a bear market if it closes at session lows.


Over the weekend Trump told reporters that investors would have to take their medicine and he would not do a deal with China until the U.S. trade deficit was sorted out, sparking a fresh wave of selling in Asian markets. [MKTS/GLOB]


"There was some hope over the weekend that maybe we would see the start of a negotiation, but the messages that we’ve so far seen suggest that President Trump is comfortable with the market reaction and that he’s going to continue on this course," said Richard Flax, chief investment officer at Moneyfarm.


European banks were on pace to confirm a bear market with Commerzbank (ETR:CBKG) and Deutsche Bank shedding 10.7% and 10%, respectively on Monday.


Investors also booked gains in shares of arms makers, which had surged earlier this year on prospect of higher defence spending. Tankmaker Rheinmetall (ETR:RHMG) dropped 10%, while Hensoldt, Rheinmetall and Renk fell between 8% and 12%.


European Union countries are weighing approval of a first set of targeted countermeasures on up to $28 billion of U.S. imports in the coming days. The 27-nation bloc faces 25% import tariffs on steel and aluminium and cars and "reciprocal" tariffs of 20% from Wednesday for almost all other goods.

The European Central Bank has estimated that a blanket U.S. tariff would lower euro zone growth by 0.3 percentage points in the first year. EU counter-tariffs on the U.S. would raise the damage to half a percentage point.

As the economic outlook has darkened, investors have ramped up their bets on interest rate cuts by the ECB and the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Traders are now pricing ECB deposit rate at 1.65% in December from 1.75% on Friday and 1.9% last week before Trump’s tariff announcement.

Barclays cut its year-end forecast for the STOXX 600 to 490 points from 580 it forecast last month, but acknowledged that "setting a point forecast has little value at this stage – there is no precedent, nor fundamental framework to rely on for this crisis."

The benchmark index is about 17% below its all-time high hit in March, before concerns over the economic fallout of Trump’s trade policy upended global market rally.

2025-04-07 17:33:17
Taiwan stocks plummet, president pledges ’golden age’ with US

By Roger Tung and Faith Hung


TAIPEI (Reuters) -Taiwan stocks plummeted almost 10% on Monday in their first trading since the United States announced new import tariffs last week, as Taiwan President Lai Ching-te took to X to pledge in English a "golden age" of shared prosperity with the U.S.


Taiwan, hit with a 32% duty, was singled out by U.S. President Donald Trump as among the U.S. trading partners with one of the highest trade surpluses with the country.


After resuming trade on Monday following market holidays on Thursday and Friday, Taiwan’s benchmark stock index plunged to its lowest level in more than a year and its biggest one-day percentage drop since at least 1990, according to LSEG data.


Taiwan on Friday announced a T$88 billion ($2.65 billion) support package for companies hit by the tariffs, while Lai on Sunday said the island would buy more from and invest more in the United States, with the aim of a zero-tariff regime between the two.


On his X account on Monday, Lai reiterated he did not seek retaliatory tariffs and that "we’ll start talking from bilateral ’zero tariffs’."


"To ensure Taiwan’s competitiveness, we’ll increase US imports & adopt other measures. Working together, we’ll usher in a golden age of shared prosperity," he added.


Taiwan has long sought a free trade deal with the United States.


While semiconductors, Taiwan’s main manufacturing strength, are not included in Trump’s tariffs, Taiwan has a trade-dependent economy highly reliant on its part in the global electronics supply chain for everything from smartphones to cars.


Shares in chipmaker TSMC and electronics maker Foxconn (SS:601138) both fell near 10%, triggering the 10% circuit breaker in the Taiwan market. "The panic selling pressure is very high," said Venson Tsai, an analyst at Cathay Futures in Taipei. "This is a problem of market confidence."


Taiwan’s top financial regulator on Sunday announced it would impose temporary curbs lasting all this week on short-selling of shares to help deal with potential market turmoil from the tariffs.


Speaking to reporters shortly after the market opened, Taiwan Stock Exchange Chairman Sherman Lin said it would coordinate with the financial regulator to take further stabilisation steps if needed.


The stock exchange will maintain flexibility in stabilisation measures this week to handle volatility stemming from new U.S. import tariffs, Lin added.


He said it would be hard for Taiwan to escape the market impact of the tariffs, but called on investors to have confidence in Taiwanese companies and the government.


Allen Huang, a vice president of Mega Financial’s securities investment unit, said in a worst-case scenario, the chance of a recession could be higher than 50%.


"We’re not expecting Trump to change his policy in the near term," he said.


​Goldman Sachs downgraded Taiwan to "underweight" in its Asian market allocations on Sunday, citing high exposure to U.S. exports and market sensitivity.


($1 = 33.2020 Taiwan dollars)

2025-04-07 14:26:44
Japan’s Nikkei plunges to 1-1/2-year low as banking shares slump

By Kevin Buckland


TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s Nikkei share average tumbled nearly 9% early on Monday, while an index of Japanese bank stocks plunged as much as 17%, as concerns over a tariff-induced global recession continued to rip through markets.


The Nikkei dropped as much as 8.8% to hit 30,792.74 for the first time since October 2023, before entering the midday trading recess down 6.5% at 31,591.84.


All 225 component stocks of the index were in the red.


The broader Topix sank as much as 9.6% before ending the morning session down 6.5%.


Speaking on Sunday aboard Air Force One, U.S. President Donald Trump characterized his latest round of sweeping tariffs as "medicine" aimed to rectify trade imbalances, and signalled a willingness to accept the market rout that followed.


Since Trump revealed the more aggressive-then-anticipated levies last week, the Nikkei has tumbled 11.6% and the U.S. S&P 500 has dropped 10.6%.


"It’s extremely difficult to judge how far this stock market correction will run (but) as long as there exists a lack of clarity of tariffs and each country’s response, the market will remain heavy," said Maki Sawada, an equities strategist at Nomura Securities.


At the same time, "the market currently is only pricing in bad news", so if there are signs of flexibility on tariffs or the announcement of economic support measures, "it’s highly likely we’ll see a bottom form in the market," Sawada said.


A topix index of banking shares slumped as much as 17.3% on Monday, before recovering slightly to enter the midday recess down 9.8%.


Banks have borne the brunt of the sell-off in Japanese equities, losing nearly a quarter of their combined value over the past three sessions, as recession worries compressed bond yields and push out bets for further interest rate hikes by the Bank of Japan.

"This is a sell-anything that has made money move," with banks at the forefront of that, said Rikki Malik, a portfolio manager at Springboard Capital.

However, "I think we are close to capitulation and will see a bounce very soon."

Resona Holdings was the worst-performing lender on Monday, with a 12.2% slump. Shares of Mizuho dropped 11.3% and Nomura slid 10.9%.

Several chip-sector stocks also saw heavy selling, with chipmaker Renesas dropping 14.8% and silicon manufacturer Sumco (OTC:SUOPY) sliding 14.4%. Heavyweight chip-making equipment manufacturer Tokyo Electron sank 8.6%.
2025-04-07 12:51:20
US stock futures slump 5%, Wall St fears another ’Black Monday’ on Trump tariffs

U.S. stock index futures plunged Sunday evening after Wall Street saw its steepest two-day drop in more than five years following President Donald Trump’s announcement of sweeping trade tariffs, which fueled recession fears and faced retaliation from key trading partners.


President Trump said on Sunday that his new tariffs are the only way to fix major trade deficits with China and the European Union, declaring that duties will stay in place.


Investors were worried Wall Street might log its worst one-day decline since 1987’s “Black Monday,” when markets around the world crashed on heightened risk aversion.


S&P 500 Futures dropped 4.5% to 4,892.25 points, while Nasdaq 100 Futures plunged 5.5% to 16,587.0 points by 20:02 ET (00:02 GMT) .Dow Jones Futures tumbled 3.5% to 37,191.0 points .


Trump tariffs escalate trade war; China retaliates, EU seeks unity 

President Donald Trump last week announced the implementation of a 10% universal import tariff, which came into effect April 5, with additional higher tariffs on major trade partners, including China, Vietnam, Japan, and the European Union, set to take effect on April 9. 


In response to the U.S. tariffs, China has imposed matching 34% duties on American goods, further intensifying the trade conflict.


The European Union is also seeking unity among its member states to formulate a coordinated response, potentially leading to additional retaliatory measures. 


These developments have heightened fears of a global trade war, with significant implications for international commerce and economic stability.


US stocks recorded steepest 2-day decline since COVID pandemic

The announcement has led to a significant sell-off in global financial markets. 

The S&P 500 plunged 6% on Friday, and lost more than 10% in the last two sessions of the previous week after Trump’s announcement on Wednesday.

The Nasdaq Composite also slumped 6% on Friday last week, and dropped more than 11% for Thursday-Friday.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average also plummeted more than 9% in the last two sessions of the previous week, entering into correction territory.

The two-day plunge marks the steepest fall since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. 

Last week, JPMorgan raised the probability of a global recession this year to 60%, from a previous 40%, driven by the likely economic shock.

Despite mounting concerns, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent dismissed fears of a looming recession in an interview on NBC News.

On Friday, investors assessed March’s nonfarm payrolls data, which came in at 228,000, a jump from the revised lower 117,000 in February.

Meanwhile, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell stated on Friday that there’s no urgency for the Fed to change interest rates, especially as the Trump administration’s trade policies are expected to push inflation higher while also dampening economic growth.

2025-04-07 10:28:31
Top 5 things to watch in markets in the week ahead

Markets enter the week on edge after a punishing stretch of tariff-driven volatility. With the first wave of U.S. tariffs taking effect Friday and more slated for April 9, investors will be watching closely for updates on global retaliation, political developments, and early signals from the corporate earnings season.


"Tariffs pose a headwind to Canadian and U.S. economic growth and put upward pressure on prices in the near term. However, the Canadian and U.S. economies entered 2025 with strong momentum," Brock Weimer, associate analyst at Edward Jones, wrote in a weekly blog post.


U.S. inflation data and a fresh deadline on the TikTok deal round out a packed week that could further increase market volatility.


1. Trade tensions escalate with tariffs set to take effect

The U.S. market selloff deepened last week as China retaliated against President Donald Trump’s sweeping 10% import taxes, fueling fears of a prolonged trade war.


The S&P 500 dropped more than 10%, marking its worst weekly loss since 2020, while global markets also posted heavy declines.


Trump’s tariffs—set to expand further on April 9—are expected to lead to a contraction in global trade, with some analysts warning of recession risks. Meanwhile, the European Union is weighing its response.


EU officials said Friday that negotiations with the U.S. were “frank,” but warned the bloc is “prepared to defend our interests” if needed.


Markets will be watching for any signs of de-escalation—or escalation—in the days ahead.


2. Trump’s social media posts continue to fuel uncertainty


President Trump continued to defend his tariff strategy over the weekend, signaling on Truth Social that he was unfazed by the market turmoil.


He claimed foreign investors were flocking to the U.S. and insisted his policies “will never change.”


While he suggested on Thursday that some countries were seeking deals ahead of Friday’s tariff deadline, Trump took a harder line on Friday morning, attacking China’s retaliatory measures.


He accused Beijing of “panicking” and reiterated his goal of stopping fentanyl shipments from China. Given last week’s developments, traders will closely monitor Trump’s feed for further updates, especially as the EU mulls its next move.


3. Earnings season kicks off with big banks

The unofficial start to earnings season arrives Friday, with reports due from BlackRock Inc (NYSE:BLK), JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM), Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), and Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE:WFC).


Retailers and airlines also report earlier in the week. Levi Strauss & Co Class A (NYSE:LEVI) posts results Monday, followed by Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc (NASDAQ:WBA) and Cal-Maine Foods Inc (NASDAQ:CALM) on Tuesday.


Delta Air Lines Inc (NYSE:DAL) reports Wednesday, providing a key look at the travel industry amid rising costs and geopolitical stress.


Still, with markets focused on Trump’s next move, positive earnings surprises may not be enough to shift sentiment if trade tensions continue to mount. Analysts warn that rising economic uncertainty from the trade dispute could weigh on investor sentiment.


4. March CPI in focus amid tariff-driven inflation fears

Thursday’s CPI report will offer a timely read on U.S. inflation as tariffs begin to ripple through supply chains.


Economists at Barclays expect the March print to be “benign and relatively unaffected by tariffs,” but warn that inflation could rise sharply later in the year due to the April 2 “Liberation Day” tariffs.


“If in line with our forecast, this could be one of the softest inflation prints we receive this year,” the bank said.


The report could influence expectations for a Fed rate cut in May, though stickier inflation driven by protectionist policy may complicate the central bank’s path.


5. TikTok Deal Deadline Extended

Trump extended the deadline for ByteDance to sell TikTok’s U.S. operations by 75 days, pushing the new cutoff into mid-June. The president said more time was needed to finalize approvals but stressed that national security concerns remain unresolved.


ByteDance confirmed ongoing talks with the U.S. government, while Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN), Oracle Corporation (NYSE:ORCL), and Applovin Corp (NASDAQ:APP) have all expressed interest in acquiring the app’s U.S. assets.


Trump’s latest comments also tied the deal to broader trade tensions with China, saying he hoped to continue negotiations “in Good Faith.”


Any updates on this front could add another layer of volatility to a market already rattled by geopolitical uncertainty.


2025-04-07 09:33:11
Dollar swoons as traders weigh tariff fallout ahead of US jobs report

By Kevin Buckland


TOKYO (Reuters) -The U.S. dollar sank on Friday and the safe-haven yen strengthened towards a six-month peak, as traders weighed the fallout from President Donald Trump’s aggressive and far-reaching new tariff measures.


The dollar slipped toward a six-month trough against the euro prior to the release of a crucial monthly U.S. payrolls report later in the day that will offer clues to the health of the economy and the outlook for monetary easing.


Traders now predict four quarter-point interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in the remainder of this year, and reduced the odds of further Bank of Japan tightening to almost nil.


The risk-sensitive Australian and New Zealand dollars plunged.


Shockwaves from Trump’s harsher-than-expected tariffs were still rippling through markets more than 24 hours after being unveiled.


Stocks took the brunt of a searing selloff, driving investors to the safety of assets such as bonds and gold on fears that a full-blown trade war could trigger a global slowdown and stoke inflation.


The dollar had already been on the backfoot this year after initial euphoria over Trump’s policy agenda turned into worry that his focus on trade barriers could lead to stagflation, or even a U.S. recession.


The dollar index, a measure of the currency against a basket of six major peers, plunged 1.9% on Thursday, its worst day since November 2022, and was down a further 0.3% in the latest session.


The dollar weakened 0.31% to 145.65 yen by 0440 GMT. It slumped 2.2% in the prior session, at one point dipping as low as 145.19 yen for the first time since October 2.


It tumbled 0.71% to 0.8532 Swiss franc, another traditional safe haven, at a fresh six-month trough.

The euro rose 0.33% to $1.1088, after jumping as high as $1.1147 on Thursday, a level not seen since September 30.

Sterling was steady at $1.3101, following its push as high as $1.3207 a day earlier, the first time it had hit that level since October 3.

"’Uncertainty’ is the word of 2025, and while we now have the tariff rates and the timeline, and Trump and (Treasury Secretary Scott) Bessent have shown some willingness to negotiate, the questions being asked of the market have only increased," Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone, wrote in a note to clients.

"The loss of confidence to hold U.S. dollars is clear."

Echoing that sentiment, Deutsche Bank warned on Thursday of the risk of a crisis of confidence in the U.S. dollar, saying major shifts in capital flow allocations could take over from currency fundamentals and spark disorderly currency moves.

Trump said he would impose a 10% baseline tariff on all imports to the United States and higher duties on some of its biggest trading partners, including a rate of 20% on the European Union and a rate of 24% on Japan.

China now faces combined duties of some 64%, when also factoring in a tariff of 10% that Trump levied in his first presidential term.

Both China and the EU vowed countermeasures, raising the risk of a broader trade war.

Chinese markets are observing a national holiday on Friday, but the dollar slid 0.5% to 7.2450 yuan in offshore trade, its lowest since March 20. On Thursday, it had leapt as much as 0.7% to a two-month high at 7.3485.

The Australian dollar, which often acts as a liquid proxy for the yuan, as well as being a barometer of risk sentiment, tumbled 1.38% to $0.6421. Similarly, the New Zealand dollar plunged 1.28% to $0.5720.

"I think Aussie is really starting to come around now to the scope of the tariffs on Australia’s largest trading partner," said Tony Sycamore, an analyst at IG.

"The situation is absolutely horrendous for China."

Economists estimate the U.S. economy added 135,000 jobs in March, down from 151,000 the month before, ahead of the release of Friday’s report.

A few hours afterwards, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is set to deliver a speech on the economic outlook.

Traders have ramped up bets for Fed easing this year in the aftermath of Trump’s latest tariffs, penciling in quarter-point cuts for June, July, October and December.

The two-year U.S. Treasury yield, which is sensitive to policy expectations, sank some 6 basis points (bps) to 3.6611% on Friday, extending an 18 bps slide from the previous day.

By contrast, traders only predict about 8 bps of rate hikes by the BOJ by year-end, whereas one quarter-point rise was previously seen early in the second half of the year.

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin rose 0.5% to just shy of $83,000, continuing to trade in a relatively tight range over the past few weeks, despite the chaos in most other markets.

2025-04-04 15:51:27
Asia stocks slide further on Trump tariffs; Japan, Australia both at 8-mth lows

Asian stocks extended steep losses on Friday as fears of a global recession intensified following U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of sweeping trade tariffs. 


Japan’s Nikkei 225 led regional declines, falling over 2.4%, while broader markets across South Korea, and Australia also retreated sharply.


Stock markets in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Indonesia were closed on Friday for respective public holidays, contributing to thin trading volumes in the region.


Friday’s sell-off followed a dismal session on Wall Street, where major U.S. indexes plummeted.


The S&P 500 tumbled 4.8% on Thursday, its biggest one-day drop in nearly five years, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite slid 6%. The sharp U.S. losses spilled over into Asian markets, as traders braced for prolonged volatility.


Asia braces for economic hit from Trump’s aggressive tariffs

Trump’s tariffs included a blanket 10% duty on all imports, alongside higher, targeted levies of up to 49% on some nations.


China now faces a combined 54% tariffs, with the 20% tariffs already in place. 


Trump’s aggressive trade stance has sparked concern that global supply chains—many of which are centered in Asia—could be severely disrupted, leading to slower economic growth in export-reliant economies.


China, Japan, and South Korea, which count the U.S. among their top export destinations, could be hit hard as demand for their goods could weaken amid higher prices and retaliatory trade measures. 


“The reciprocal tariff would hit Southeast Asian countries, where many Chinese companies have set up manufacturing hubs in the past few years to export to other countries including the US,” UBS analysts said in a note.


Investors also worry that strained trade relations could discourage business investment and weigh on corporate earnings across the region.

Both Japanese and Australian stock markets hit 8-mth lows
Japan’s Nikkei slumped nearly 3% on Friday, after falling as much as 5% a day earlier. The index was at its lowest level since early August 2024.

TOPIX declined 3.5%, and was on the brink of entering a correction territory.

Losses in Japan were also attributable to a stronger yen, which weighs on exporters.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 fell as much as 2% to an eight-month low.

Other regional markets were also sharply lower. Singapore’s Straits Times Index lost 2.8%.

Futures for India’s Nifty 50 were 0.2% lower.

S. Korea’s constitutional court ousts President Yoon; KOSPI down
South Korea’s KOSPI declined 1.5%. 

​South Korea’s Constitutional Court on Friday unanimously upheld the impeachment of President Yoon Suk Yeol, officially removing him from office. 

The decision follows Yoon’s controversial declaration of martial law in December 2024, which the court deemed a serious violation of the Constitution and a betrayal of public trust.

2025-04-04 13:10:21
OPEC+ unexpectedly speeds up oil output hikes, oil drops

By Olesya Astakhova, Ahmad Ghaddar and Alex Lawler


LONDON/MOSCOW (Reuters) - Eight OPEC+ countries unexpectedly agreed on Thursday to advance their plan to phase out oil output cuts by increasing output by 411,000 barrels per day in May, a decision that prompted oil prices to extend earlier sharp losses.


Oil, which was already down over 4% on U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of tariffs on trading partners, extended declines after OPEC updated its plans in a statement, with Brent crude dropping over 6% to below $70 a barrel.


Eight members of OPEC+, which includes the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies led by Russia, had been scheduled to raise output by 135,000 barrels per day in May as part of a plan to gradually unwind their most recent layer of output cuts.


But after a meeting of the eight countries held online on Thursday, the group announced it would boost output by 411,000 bpd in May. OPEC cited "continuing healthy market fundamentals and the positive market outlook."


"This comprises the increment originally planned for May in addition to two monthly increments," OPEC said in a statement referring to the volume. "The gradual increases may be paused or reversed subject to evolving market conditions."


The increase will reduce fears arising from any disruption to Iranian supply as Trump restores maximum pressure on Tehran, also an OPEC member. The U.S. President, who has called on OPEC to lower prices since starting his second term, may visit Saudi Arabia as soon as next month.


The May hike is the next increment of a plan agreed by Russia, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, Algeria, Kazakhstan and Oman to gradually unwind their most recent output cut of 2.2 million bpd, which came into effect this month.


OPEC+ also has 3.65 million bpd of other output cuts in place until the end of next year to support the market. The total of 5.85 million bpd is equal to about 5.7% of global supply.


FOCUS ON COMPLIANCE


The decision on Thursday partly reflects OPEC+ leaders’ wish to improve compliance with production quotas, analysts said.


"OPEC+ focus is on compliance and this decision forces the laggards to step up compliance," said Amrita Sen, co-founder of Energy Aspects.


Record output in Kazakhstan has angered several other members of the group, including top producer Saudi Arabia, sources have told Reuters. OPEC+ is urging the Central Asian country, among other members, to make further cuts to compensate for excess production.


Kazakhstan has been producing oil well above the targets agreed with OPEC+ in recent months. OPEC data also shows some other OPEC+ nations such as the United Arab Emirates, Nigeria and Gabon pumping above their quotas, but by far smaller amounts.


Production in Kazakhstan could drop this month and exports could decline after Russia ordered to shut some export capacity on the CPC pipeline, the main evacuation route for oil in Kazakhstan produced by oil majors such as U.S. Chevron (NYSE:CVX) and Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM).


The eight OPEC+ countries will meet on May 5 to decide on June output, OPEC’s statement said.


(This story has been refiled to fix the spelling of ‘Iranian’ in paragraph 6)

2025-04-04 10:14:43
Stock market today: S&P 500 in biggest slump since 2020 as Trump’s tariffs bite

The S&P 500 suffered its biggest one-day slumped since 2020 after U.S. President Donald Trump announced comprehensive trade tariffs, prompting fears of an all-out trade war that could result in a global recession.


At 4:00 p.m. ET (21:00 GMT), the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1,679.4 points or 4%, the benchmark S&P 500 plunged by 4.8%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 6%.


Trump tariffs prompt sharp selloff

President Trump announced sweeping new tariffs on Wednesday, imposing a 10% levy on all imports and significantly higher rates on countries deemed "bad actors." 


China faces an additional 34% tariff on top of the 20% duties already in place. The European Union, Japan, and others will see tariffs ranging from 20% to 49%. 


The broad tariffs take effect on April 5, with the country-specific hikes starting April 9.


Trump justified the tariffs by citing unfair trade practices and currency manipulation, asserting that these measures would rejuvenate American industries and reduce the national debt.


The "U.S. tariffs announcement was more hawkish than expected, particularly for Europe and China, with rates at 20% and ~54%," said analysts at Barclays, in a note. "Although there may be room for negotiation and many twists ahead, high tariffs and lingering uncertainty raise recession risk. Likely worse before getting better for stocks."


These tariff policies could see U.S. gross domestic product take a 10% hit in the second quarter of 2025, High Frequency Economics Chief Economist Carl Weinberg said in a note Thursday, potentially pushing the world’s largest economy into a recession after a predicted small contraction in the first quarter.


Weinberg estimated that tariffs would take $741 billion out of U.S. household real incomes or corporate profits, or more if fully accounting for all tariffs on aluminum, steel and non-exempt trade with Canada and Mexico. 


UBS estimates that if these tariffs remain in place, real GDP could decline by 1.5 to 2 percentage points in 2025, while inflation could approach 5%. 


The Swiss bank states that this scenario "has the potential to considerably worsen the growth inflation mix in the U.S. and the global economy in the coming year."


UBS analysts have set a near-term target of 5300 for the S&P 500, but warned in a note to clients  that ongoing tariff uncertainty could drive the index below 5000. 


Tariffs could hit Apple’s net profit by 14% - Jefferies

A number of the country’s major corporations have been hit hard by the tariffs news, with Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), down 9%, a prime example given the hefty tariff on China - the base for much of Apple’s manufacturing.


Jefferies analysts warned that proposed U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports could significantly impact Apple’s profitability, estimating a potential 14% reduction in the company’s net profit for fiscal 2025 if it is not granted an exemption.


Shares of big sellers of imported goods were among the hardest hit. Five Below (NASDAQ:FIVE), Dollar Tree (NASDAQ:DLTR) and Gap (NYSE:GAP), for example, all suffered double digit percentage losses. 


Retailers were also hit hard, with Nike (NYSE:NKE) and Walmart (NYSE:WMT) slumping after tariffs were imposed on major production hubs including Vietnam, Indonesia and China.


Tech shares also dropped in an overall risk-off mood, with Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) both around more than 7% and 5% respectively. 


Jobless claims drop; March jobs report looms

The number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits fell last week, dropping 6,000 for the week ended March 29, pointing to continued labor market stability ahead of potential volatility from import tariffs.


Private payrolls, released on Wednesday, surprised to the upside, while JOLTS job openings disappointed earlier in the week, setting the scene for Friday’s nonfarm payrolls release.


That said, the Federal Reserve’s decision making as far as rate cuts are concerned could well now be determined by the impact on the U.S. economy from the trade tariffs.


Federal Reserve Governor Adriana Kugler said there were "upside risks" to inflation associated with Trump’s policy changes.


But these tariffs will likely dampen near-term growth, increase market volatility, and prompt the Federal Reserve to deliver significant rate cuts later this year, according to UBS.


The bank’s base case scenario assumes rate cuts of 75 to 100 basis points (bps) over the remainder of 2025.


(Peter Nurse, Ayushman Ojha and Scott Kanowsky contributed to this article.)

2025-04-04 09:28:10
U.S. tariff rate now at 22%, highest since 1910- Fitch

The sweeping new U.S. import tariffs announced by President Donald Trump have pushed the country’s average tariff rate to 22%, up from just 2.5% in 2024, according to Fitch Ratings.


That level of protectionism hasn’t been seen since around 1910, Fitch’s U.S. economic research head Olu Sonola said in a statement following the announcement.


"This is a game changer, not only for the U.S. economy but for the global economy," Sonola said. "Many countries will likely end up in a recession. You can throw most forecasts out the door, if this tariff rate stays on for an extended period of time."


Trump introduced a 10% baseline tariff on all imports, with significantly steeper rates for key trading partners, including 34% on China and 20% on the European Union. The administration also confirmed a 25% tariff on auto and auto parts. Speaking from the White House Rose Garden, Trump said the new tariffs would help restore critical manufacturing sectors to the U.S.


Over the coming months, the most immediate effect of the new levies is expected to be higher prices on thousands of consumer and business goods. That price pressure could curb demand both domestically and globally, adding to the risk of recession.


Tariff rates vary significantly by country—from 10% on UK imports to 49% on goods from Cambodia—suggesting uneven economic impacts. A broadening trade war would likely hit China especially hard, as it faces weak internal demand and would need to find new export markets.


If the U.S. economy begins to slide into recession under the weight of these tariffs, the repercussions would extend to many developing economies that rely on U.S. demand.


Financial markets reacted sharply, with stock futures falling and investors rotating into traditional safe havens including bonds, gold, and the Japanese yen.

2025-04-03 17:14:04