
Stocks rise as markets grapple with US trade ruling
Global stocks rose while the US dollar weakened after giving up earlier gains against big peers on Thursday as markets digested the surprise ruling of a trade court that blocked
US President Donald Trump's
so-called 'Liberation Day'
tariffs.
The US Court of International Trade issued a ruling late on Wednesday that Trump overstepped his authority by imposing across-the-board duties on imports from trading partners.
The decision triggered a court battle that would likely weigh on markets, after the Trump administration swiftly appealed the ruling and appeared poised to fight up to the US supreme court if needed.
Dublin
Ryanair
rose marginally to €23.74 but the move was significant for chief executive Michael O'Leary, who is now set for a monster €100 million bonus after the airline's shares hit a key performance target.
READ MORE
The €23.74 close marked the 28th consecutive day the stock has closed above €21, the target for Mr O'Leary was set as part of a 2019 incentive scheme.
The only thing stopping Mr O'Leary getting one of the biggest payouts in European business history is if he leaves before July 2028.
Insulation maker Kingspan, which has a big operation in the US, rose by 1.46 per cent to €76.65 in line US market moves.
Hotel group Dalata fell by close to 1 per cent to €5.68 as figures from the Central Statistics Office pointed to an ongoing decline in tourist numbers here. However, industry representatives disputed the numbers, suggesting the industry was experiencing stronger footfall.
Europe
Europe's Stoxx 600 index was down 0.13 per cent, after rising earlier in the session.
Media and utilities stocks were the worst performers, both down around 0.5 per cent.
Euro zone government bond yields inched down on Thursday as investors worried about the long term economic outlook after a federal court blocked most of Mr Trump's sweeping tariffs.
Germany's 10-year government bond yield, the euro area benchmark, fell 3.5 basis points (bps) to 2.51 per cent.
London
British equities were mixed on Thursday, as losses in utilities offset positive sentiments on the US court's decision.
The blue-chip FTSE 100 fell 0.1 per cent, while the domestically focused FTSE 250 rose 0.3 per cent.
On Wednesday, the US Court of International Trade ruled that Trump overstepped his authority by imposing duties on trading partners, invalidating most of his tariffs since January. However, the ruling did not address some industry-specific tariffs on automobiles, steel, and aluminium.
However, US White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett said three trade deals were nearly done and he expected more despite the judgment.
Bond-proxy utilities were the biggest laggards on the blue-chip index, falling 2.1 per cent. National Grid and Severn Trent fell 3.8 per ent and 2.3 per cent, respectively, after trading without entitlement to their latest dividend payouts.
Shares of automotive platform Auto Trader tumbled 11.3 per cent to a more than one-month low after missing annual revenue estimates.
Hollywood Bowl
fell 10.3 per cent, leading the decline in mid-cap index. The company which runs tenpin bowling centres in the UK and Canada, posted 9.4 per cent fall in half-year pretax profit to £28 million.
New York
Wall Street's main indexes rose on Thursday after a federal court ruled against most of US President Donald Trump's tariffs and AI bellwether Nvidia reported a 69 per cent surge in quarterly sales.
Nvidia jumped 5 per cent after reporting higher-than-expected quarterly sales growth, driven by customers stockpiling AI chips in advance of US export restrictions on China.
The company, however, warned that the new curbs are expected to cut $8 billion from its current-quarter sales.
'We're in a secular growth trajectory here for AI, AI investment, and everything seems to be lining up for the next kind of multi-quarter expansion across AI,' said David Russell, global head of market strategy at TradeStation.
Dow component Salesforce weighed on the index, with its shares slumping 5.4 per cent even as the enterprise software provider raised its annual revenue and adjusted profit forecasts.
Apple, which Mr Trump threatened with tariffs last week, rose nearly 1 per cent. Tesla rose 2.2 per cent and Amazon
added 1.2 per cent among megacap and growth stocks.
– Additional reporting by Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Business Post
2 hours ago
- Business Post
Ireland's aquatech sector is making waves
A key pillar of Ireland's seafood economy is the aquaculture sector, which reported value growth of 25 per cent and volume growth of 4 per cent last year, according to the latest Business of Seafood report by Bord Iascaigh Mhara (BIM), Ireland's seafood development agency. With a total value of €211 million – of which salmon accounted for €142 million last year – Ireland is establishing a reputation for high-quality aquaculture, although the sector has a long way to go to catch up with the likes of Norway, or international powerhouses like China or Chile. Where Ireland does have the potential to make a global impact, however, is in aquatech. In 2023, BIM declared that Ireland has the potential to become the 'Silicon Valley of the aquatech industry', such was the level of investment taking place in the nascent sector. Two years on, that momentum has shown no signs of slowing, according to Caroline Bocquel, chief executive at BIM. 'The Irish aquatech sector started at zero five years ago, and is now worth about €165 million,' she explained. 'What we've seen is that companies that have come through in the sector have spent one or two years in their startup phase, then moved on to Series A and Series B funding. Now they're really taking off.' Aquatech covers a broad range of services, including marine engineering, genetics, feed additives, bioscience, health solutions and digital technologies, with much of the innovation in this sector supporting global salmon and shrimp farming, as well as domestic shellfish and seaweed operators. As global demand for sustainable aquaculture continues to gain pace, Ireland is well-positioned to capitalise. 'There's a limit to the amount of aquaculture that Ireland can produce, but there's a €300 billion international aquaculture industry that we, as a country, can support,' said Bocquel. 'Aquaculture is relatively new – it's only about 50 years old as a sector – and it's moving at pace in terms of using technology to make farms more efficient, improve survivability, disease resistance, etc. We now have a stable of companies that are able to provide that technology, at a global level, and that will continue to grow over the coming years.' BIM has been investing in the aquatech industry for the past six years, and currently supports more than 70 companies in the sector, a figure it expects to grow exponentially. The Irish aquatech sector started at zero five years ago, and is now worth about €165 million BIM recently announced details of its 2025 Aquatech Innovation Studio, in partnership with Hatch Blue and backed by the European Maritime, Fisheries and Aquaculture Fund (EMFAF) – a six-day programme to support early-stage aquatech startups. The initiative provides mentoring, investor training and technical development, providing a springboard for aquatech innovation. Auranta ( is an example of an Irish business that has gained an international footprint in the aquatech sector. The Dublin-based biotech company, which develops fish feed to bolster the immunity and gut health of species like shrimp and salmon, was awarded the BIM Aquatech Business of the Year award in 2024. 'There's a huge opportunity in this space, as we can offer a test bed for new technologies in our farms, ahead of their deployment internationally,' says Bocquel. 'Ireland has successfully grown businesses in other tech sectors – we see an opportunity to replicate this in aquatech.' As well as mentoring services, BIM assists Irish aquatech firms in accessing venture capital ('we hold their hand for the first three or four years') until they become self-sufficient and more established in their funding rounds. The net result is little short of astounding. Bocquel admits that she is 'blown away' by the level to which businesses in the sector have matured in such a short space of time. 'Watching them talk about their business makes you think, 'Oh my God, why didn't anyone else think of that? That's brilliant',' she said. The application process for the BIM Aquatech Innovation Studio is open until 18 July, with the studio running from October 13 to 18. Details are available at


Irish Independent
3 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Irish shares hit all-time high despite tariff uncertainty
The Iseq 20 index of leading Irish shares hit a record high of 1963.01 yesterday, slipping back only slightly before closing at 1,956.02. The index is made up of the leading shares on the Euronext Dublin exchange, including heavyweights Ryanair, Kerry, Kingspan and Glanbia as well as AIB and Bank of Ireland. Shares hit their high after the European Central Bank (ECB) cut rates for an eighth time in 12 months on Thursday, a move that would traditionally be seen as a boost to investment, credit and consumer confidence. The MSCI global index, which draws on leading shares from across the developed world, hit an all-time high on Tuesday, boosted by particularly strong gains for Germany's Dax index. In Ireland, the Iseq 20 index only at the start of this year recovered to levels seen in 2007, at the peak of the Celtic Tiger, unlike most European and US markets where shares have long since pushed higher over the past decade. However, the composition of the Irish shares indices has also radically changed, not just since 2007 – when bank shares crashed – but in the past three years as heavyweight stocks like CRH, Flutter and Smurfit Kappa shifted their listings to the US, shrinking the potential size of the Irish index. The Irish high this week was in line with global and European trends. Wall Street rebounded yesterday after a generally upbeat employment report, and a bounce-back in Tesla shares helped put the indexes on track for weekly advances. In the US, jobs numbers yesterday were relatively weak but not as bad as feared, and markets shifted higher in response. This is a sigh of relief report The US economy added 139,000 jobs in May while the unemployment rate held firm at 4.2pc, according to the Labour Department. 'This is a sigh of relief report; people were really worried that this was going to be a kind of start of a downturn in the labour market and therefore start the downturn in the economy,' said Scott Ladner, chief investment officer at Horizon Investments in Charlotte, North Carolina. 'It came in pretty much on the screws and we've got a bit of a reprieve, at least for a month. That's leading to a pretty large relief rally,' Mr Ladner added. In Ireland and across the globe, investors are increasingly looking past the near-term risk of Donald Trump imposing further destabilising tariffs and anti-trade measures, and are focused on the underlying economy, which has so far shrugged off any real negative fallout. How long that can be sustained remains to be seen. Bank of America's influential strategist Michael Hartnett warned yesterday that global stocks are getting close to triggering a technical 'sell' signal, saying the market is running too hot after surging 20pc in just two months. He cited data points on fund flows and market breadth as evidence that investors have been rushing into risk assets and positioning is getting stretched. Traders often use that as a marker because it can theoretically indicate that the buying power in the market is likely to soon be exhausted, leaving prices vulnerable to a pullback. At the same time, the market is approaching 'overbought territory,' he said. The Bank of America data highlights a nervousness among traders about the rapid pace of recent stock gains. The combination of the Trump administration's tax-cut package to boost growth, plus a softer stance on tariffs and robust economic data, has fanned optimism. US equity futures rallied yesterday after the monthly jobs report came in stronger than expected. In Europe, the new German government's push to support industry as well as ECB easing of credit has fed into the rising stock markets. However, major risks are hovering close to the surface. Mr Trump has set a July 9 deadline for talks with the European Union to produce a trade deal, threatening a 50pc tariff on European goods if they fail. The White House has yet to lock in trade terms with China, Japan or Canada. Meanwhile, Mr Trump's public falling out with Elon Musk has been playing on stock markets as the main driver of swings in Tesla's share price, both higher and lower at different times this week.


Irish Examiner
4 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Shannon Airport CEO optimistic for summer season despite geopolitical tensions
After a landmark year in 2024, Shannon Airport is building on its momentum with new routes, increased investment, and a growing passenger base taking it from strength to strength. Welcoming 2.1m passengers last year, its highest number since 2009, the Shannon Airport Group posted an 8% rise in annual turnover in 2024 — rising to more than €73m, with its pre-tax profit for the year totalling almost €26m. Its success has caught the attention of several major airlines, with the airport now offering its largest transatlantic schedule with five daily nonstop flights to the US, landing in New York, Newark, Boston and Chicago. Its latest vote of confidence came earlier this week from budget airline Ryanair, which announced three new routes alongside a $100m investment in the airport as it continues to expand its presence across regional hubs. The investment includes the addition of a new aircraft to be stationed at Shannon, bringing its total number to four for its 2025 winter schedule. It now hosts one more Ryanair aircraft than Cork, despite the second largest airport having 1m more passengers last year. 'We see a huge potential for growth and believe there is a real opportunity for us,' said Mary Considine, the chief executive officer of the Shannon Airport Group. Shannon Airport CEO Mary Considine says Ireland's aviation policy should be changed because Dublin has an 85-86% market share. Picture: Arthur Ellis Appointed in October 2019, Ms Considine told the Irish Examiner: 'The more aircraft we have here, the more frequency and services Ryanair can offer. 'In addition to increased frequencies for our six most popular routes, they have also been able to announce three new routes for the winter: Madrid, Madeira and Lapland.' Yet despite its enhanced connectivity across Europe, Shannon's transatlantic flights remain some of its busiest and are a vital component of its overall operations. However, as political tensions rise across the US, the number of people travelling across the Atlantic from Ireland has fallen drastically. Recent figures from the US International Trade Administration (ITA) found that passenger travel from Ireland fell by 27% in March when compared to the same month in 2024, with Ireland representing one of the highest decreases across all European countries. When geopolitical events are happening with heightened uncertainty, sometimes people hesitate in making decisions Yet, despite this downward demand pressure on US travel, Ms Considine remains optimistic. 'Talking with our airline partners, they're very confident about the summer season. There are very strong forward bookings, which go back to the strong market for the US from here," she said. 'We have very strong foreign direct investment in the catchment area of Shannon Airport. Almost 50% of the [foreign direct investment] in the country comes from within our immediate catchment area. "We're also the international gateway to the Wild Atlantic Way, and we are seeing strong tourism growth.' Noting recent figures from the Central Statistics Office, which found tourism numbers had fallen by 4% in April, Ms Considine says that has not been reflected in the airport's performance. 'We've seen good growth here. We saw 7% growth last year, and we expect to be up by between 7-8% again this year. Preclearance facility The CEO also notes Shannon's US preclearance facility — one of only two across Europe, the other being in Dublin — which she says brings greater comfort to Irish people, especially young adults and those travelling on J1 visas, and even provides an opportunity for the airport to grow. 'Take Charles De Gaulle [Airport], for example,' Ms Considine said. 'They bring quite an amount of transfer passengers here, because people prefer to pre-clear here then be refused once they get to the US. We see that kind of demand growing at Shannon, which provides an opportunity for us here But Shannon Airport's long-standing history with the US is reflected across its operations and not just in its commercial flight offerings. Recent months have seen a renewed focus on the regional airport over reports that Israeli aircraft have flown weaponry from the US to Ireland through Irish airspace. Last week, RTÉ reported that between 2022 and 2024, a total of 978 US military flights landed at Irish airports, mostly in Shannon, for refuelling and maintenance purposes. During the same period, more than 1,000 applications were made by US civil aircraft with munitions of war on board to land at Shannon. Reports of these flights have drawn large crowds to the airport in protest of its accommodation of US military aircraft, particularly those bound for Israel. Addressing these demonstrations, Ms Considine said that while the airport accepts and recognises the right to protest in a peaceful manner, Shannon Airport operates solely based on government policy. At the end of the day, we work under the direction of the Irish Government. We are State-owned and our focus is on providing a safe, secure and operational airport "Anything that interferes with the safety and security of the airport is obviously something to be concerned about," she said. 'Concerning recent incidents, we're working very closely with gardaí to ensure there is no impact on the operation of our aerodrome facility. Addressing the reports of military aircraft coming through the airport, Ms Considine added: 'It's government policy. Everything is done in line with existing policy, and everything that requires clearance from the Government receives that clearance. 'It is government policy, and we implement government policy.' Shannon has five daily transatlantic flights, its pre-clearance facility reassuring passengers of guaranteed entry to the US. Picture: Denis Scannell Looking forward, Ms Considine says recent investments from Ryanair and US airline partners fall concisely in line with its own future strategy, which prioritises passenger growth, infrastructure improvements, and the airport group's commercial property portfolio, which the CEO says has experienced strong growth in recent months, particularly across the manufacturing sector. In addition, Shannon is also seeking to re-balance what Ms Considine has called a lopsided market share among Ireland's airports. 'If you look at Dublin, it has an 85-86% market share. We need to look at where people want to go and then meet those needs. That is why growing the range of services from Shannon Airport is so important, so we can offer that choice and then grow our market share. 'This is why we have been calling on the Government to revise its aviation policy. One avenue open to them is to amend the threshold under the regional airports programme so that airports up to 3m passengers can apply for grant funding. 'I also think it would be good for the country if we had better distribution of air traffic to free up capacity in Dublin, allowing them to go after those long-haul markets, while allowing us all to be complimentary of one another. 'It's not about not allowing Dublin to grow, it's about growing all airports and using the airport system more holistically.' Read More Ryanair to base fourth aircraft at Shannon adding routes to Madrid and Lapland