
Global stocks mostly rise on trade deal hopes while Tesla plummets
Investors have profited in recent weeks from wagers that governments will eventually hammer out pacts with Donald Trump ahead of the US president's looming August 1 deadline to avoid steeper levies.
"Buyers are in control and there remains a lot of optimism about future trade deals," said Adam Sarhan of 50 Park Investments.
"For now the market is choosing to look at the bullish side of the coin," he said. "Not the bearish side and not the neutral side."
On Wall Street, both the S&P 500 and tech-heavy Nasdaq edged higher to close at fresh records, while the Dow retreated.
Google parent Alphabet climbed 0.9 per cent after reporting a whopping US$28.2 billion in second-quarter profits as it touted its artificial intelligence offerings.
But Tesla fell 8.2 per cent as CEO Elon Musk warned investors of a rough patch for earnings after the electric car maker reported a 16 per cent drop in quarterly profits.
A survey of US manufacturers released Thursday showed business confidence in the world's top economy also deteriorated in July for the second month running.
"Companies cite ongoing concerns over the impact of government policies, notably in terms of both tariffs and cuts to federal spending," said Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
In Europe, London's FTSE 100 gained 0.9 per cent at the close, lifted by a stream of robust earnings, including from consumer goods group Reckitt, mobile phone giant Vodafone and Lloyds bank.
Paris fell, dragged down by a drop in luxury stocks and disappointing profits from fossil fuel giant TotalEnergies.
Yet most other European stocks markets including Frankfurt rose, as the European Union and Washington appeared close to a deal that would halve a threatened 30-per cent levy on EU goods to 15 per cent.
A European Commission spokesman said Thursday that he believed a trade deal with the US is "within reach."
According to multiple diplomats, the deal could waive tariffs on aircraft, lumber, pharmaceutical products and agricultural goods.
The bloc, however, is still forging ahead with contingency plans in case talks fail, with member states approving a 93-billion-euro (US$109-billion) package of counter-tariffs on US goods.
Meanwhile, the European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged, as widely expected.
It warned that the economic environment remained "exceptionally uncertain, especially because of trade disputes" as higher US tariffs hang in the balance.
The euro dipped a touch following Thursday's rate decision, but it did perk up after ECB President Christine Lagarde said the central bank was monitoring the dollar-euro exchange rate but had no target.
The euro has surged almost 14 per cent against the dollar since the start of the year, boosted by investors dumping US assets in the face of Trump's erratic policymaking and attacks on the US Federal Reserve.
The euro's appreciation helps contain inflation but could harm European exports and thus slow already sluggish economic growth.
In Asia, stocks advanced with Tokyo adding more than one per cent, building on a more than three per cent surge Wednesday on the back of the Japan-US trade deal.
Hong Kong and Shanghai also rose.
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