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Apple shares fall 4% after Trump threatens to impose 25% tariff. Here's why

Apple shares fall 4% after Trump threatens to impose 25% tariff. Here's why

Time of India23-05-2025

Apple share prices on Friday fell 4% to hit a low of $193.46 reacting to US President Donald Trump's threat that his government would impose a new 25% levy against the iPhone maker if the handsets sold in the US are made elsewhere.
Trump also ratcheted up the US trade war further saying that a 50% tariff on the European Union would also be slapped, lamenting that negotiations with the EU "are going nowhere,". Trump on Truth Social said that he is recommending "a straight 50% Tariff on the European Union, starting on June 1, 2025."
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The announcement sparked a sell-off on Wall Street with Dow 30 declining by 0.94% or 391.47 points to 41,467.60 in the initial trade. S&P 500 also fell by 64.68 points and 1.11% around 10:15 AM ET and traded at 5,777.33. Nasdaq Composite was the worst hit at 18,663.90, falling by 261.83 points or 1.38%.
Other major stocks like Microsoft Corporation, NVIDIA Corporation, Amazon, Alphabet and Meta were also down by up to 2%.
If the new duties come into effect, they would dramatically hike the current US baseline levy of 10 percent, and raise economic tensions between the world's biggest economy and its largest trading bloc, a Reuters report said.
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In a separate message, the president said Apple had failed to move iPhone production to the United States despite his repeated requests, and he threatened new duties of "at least" 25 percent if they did not comply.
The VIX volatility index, known as Wall Street's "fear gauge," was up 18.5 % at around 9:30 am local time in New York.
Trump had to pause reciprocal tariffs on April 9, following a week into its implementation on April 2 which he referred to as the 'Liberation Day'. Prior to this, he had imposed a 25% tariff of steel and aluminium imports.
The Trump administration is in discussions with more than a dozen governments, including the European Union, in an effort to forge trade agreements before global tariffs are reinstated in early July.
On May 12, both the US and China arrived at an agreement on tariffs and paused tit-for-tat tariffs for 90 days.
Notwithstanding this, some foreign officials have expressed concern that the US has not clearly outlined its demands, making them reluctant to offer major concessions amid fears that President Trump could reimpose tariffs unpredictably.

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Sensex slumps 257 pts; Nifty below 24,900; VIX slides 2.13%
Sensex slumps 257 pts; Nifty below 24,900; VIX slides 2.13%

Business Standard

time24 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Sensex slumps 257 pts; Nifty below 24,900; VIX slides 2.13%

The headline equity benchmarks traded with moderate losses in early afternoon trade, amid rising geopolitical tensions between Israel and Iran. Market sentiment remains cautious, with geopolitical factors likely to shape further movement. Investors will closely track crude oil prices, the G7 summit, upcoming Bank of Japans policy decision and the outcome of the upcoming U.S. Federal Reserve meeting later this week. The Nifty traded below the 24,900 level. Metal shares declined after advancing for previous trading session. At 12:30 IST, the barometer index, the S&P BSE Sensex declined 257.07 points or 0.31% to 81,537.48. The Nifty 50 index fell 90.55 points or 0.35% to 24,858.25. In the broader market, the S&P BSE Mid-Cap index shed 0.15% and the S&P BSE Small-Cap index fell 0.23%. The market breadth was negative. On the BSE, 1,679 shares rose and 2,110 shares fell. A total of 202 shares were unchanged. Derivatives: The NSE's India VIX, a gauge of the market's expectation of volatility over the near term, fell 2.13% to 14.52. The Nifty 26 Jun 2025 futures were trading at 24,896, at a premium of 37.75 points as compared with the spot at 24,858.25. The Nifty option chain for the 26 June 2025 expiry showed a maximum call OI of 67.1 lakh contracts at the 26,000 strike price. Maximum put OI of 56.8 lakh contracts was seen at the 24,500 strike price. Buzzing Index: The Nifty Metal index fell 0.72% to 9,290.45. The index added 1.07% in the previous trading session. Hindustan Copper (down 2.9%), Hindustan Zinc (down 2.59%), NMDC (down 1.83%), Jindal Stainless (down 1.55%), Adani Enterprises (down 1.45%), National Aluminium Company (down 1.35%), APL Apollo Tubes (down 0.98%), Steel Authority of India (down 0.87%), Jindal Steel & Power (down 0.86%) and Tata Steel (down 0.62%) down. On the other hand, Lloyds Metals & Energy (up 0.78%), Welspun Corp (up 0.04%) and JSW Steel (up 0.01%) added. Stocks in Spotlight: ITCONS E-Solutions rose 0.32%. The company announced that it has received new work order worth Rs 62.66 lakhs from Wipro for providing technical manpower services. NBCC (India) shed 0.75%. The company announced that it has secured a contract worth Rs 172.46 crore from UCO Bank for the construction of the banks head office in Kolkata. Vipul Organics hit an upper limit of 5% after the company announced that it has received the final approval and the first commercial order for a newly developed organic intermediate intended for use in the automobile industry.

Midcaps still overheated; Nifty valuations offer relative safety: Shiv Puri
Midcaps still overheated; Nifty valuations offer relative safety: Shiv Puri

Time of India

time28 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Midcaps still overheated; Nifty valuations offer relative safety: Shiv Puri

"The earnings outlook which started moderating over the last 12 months has started to bottom. You are seeing that in the GDP numbers and therefore with the lag you will start also seeing that in earnings rebounding," says Shiv Puri , TVF Capital Advisors . What is the world looking like? It is just utter chaos, but it seems like there is some stability for equity markets. Shiv Puri: Yes, in the last few years I cannot think of many times where there has not been chaos in the global markets. But for the markets to do well typically it needs three things. One is, it needs free flowing credit. Second is, you need a strong earnings outlook and the third is, you need cheap valuations. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Kulkas yang belum Terjual dengan Harga Termurah (Lihat harga) Cari Sekarang Undo And if you look at the story in India 12 months ago, all three were yellow or even red. But today over the last 12 months, you have seen with the reserve pay increasing, liquidity into the system, with rates getting cut, we do have liquidity that is flowing back into the credit markets . The earnings outlook which started moderating over the last 12 months has started to bottom. You are seeing that in the GDP numbers and therefore with the lag you will start also seeing that in earnings rebounding. Valuations still remain high, they do not remain cheap but within that again if you look at what is happening in the larger names and the Nifty kind of names, those names look very reasonable; whereas if you look at the midcap and the smallcaps, they still look high. Live Events So, we are two-and-a-half out of three in terms of what it takes to have a sustained market which is quite resilient and so therefore, the equity markets outlook is constructive, barring geopolitical risk which is something that we live with now every day of the year and those are inherently unpredictable. The global markets have made a bet that geopolitical conflicts are going to be regional and not global and as long as that remains the case, the markets are going to be okay. But that is obviously inherently unpredictable. But tariffs would be and we have definitely seen that get priced in in the markets for store I guess beginning March and then in the run-up to April. Since then, markets have rebounded, S&P 500 already at an all-time peak, and many other global markets as well, we are also pretty much close to that. But is that baked in into the prices? Shiv Puri: I think the tariffs has created more uncertainty in terms of what those levels actually will be than the reality of what the impact is going to happen. And if you look at it in the context of India, exports as a percentage of GDP is still fairly low and most of that is still services. So, in the context of goods, while it is still important for industries and it needs to be resolved, at the GDP level, at the economic level for India, it should not be that material an impact. However, the thing to keep in mind is, of course, consequences of consequences. The second-degree impacts of everything and so those are going to be determined by where these rates actually end up because obviously, they have been all over the map in the last six months. And you spoke about how earnings need to solidify a little bit more for the funders of India to be a little more solid. Now, the quarter gone by, quarter four, we were already headed in a muted expectations which is why the numbers were looking fairly okay. But going ahead in the quarters to come, you are going to have the base effect from last year kick in. So, do you believe fundamentally we are going to be doing well or the numbers only going to look good because there was a weak base? Shiv Puri: Well, if you rewind the clock a little bit, we had a huge bounce back in earnings post covid and you had 20% plus earnings growth for the index because covid was depressed. Thereafter it became a little hard when you entered the last 18 odd months and so you saw muted earnings growth in the single digits. When you look at the next 12 months, one, of course, as you mentioned correctly there is a base effect that will be favourable, but second is, there are other pockets that are starting to now pick up. One, of course, as I said is credit is starting to flow more freely in the economy, you are seeing rural consumption that is starting to pick up, government capex which was pretty subdued looks like it is starting to move a little higher. And the two real areas which still have not seen anything improve yet is urban consumption which is still fairly muted and the second is private capex, company capex numbers still have not picked up. But when you put all the pieces together, I still think it is two-and-a-half out of three or three out of four in terms of where we are. So, definitely, a better position than last year. You talked about as to how there is valuation comfort still when it comes to largecaps. Where do you see those stories play out and where is it that you are finding those outsized opportunities? Shiv Puri: Well, I think still there areas like, for example, private sector financial, especially the largecap names seem to be fairly reasonably priced at the moment and then again, if you look at some of the other sectors, valuations are always in context of what their durability and quality of the growth is going to be. So, it is magnitude, durability, and quality. And so, if you factor some of that in, there are a few other areas even in consumer discretionary, in healthcare, especially in some of the hospital names that I still think have a very long runway of growth where I see opportunity. Also talk about the about the fund flow that we are seeing because of late, the FIIs are seem to be making a bit of a comeback in the Indian markets and we did talk about the global uncertainty that still persists. Do you believe, can India be that oasis amongst all the emerging markets and the developed economies which are on the stock market front they are already at an all-time high and while Indian macros are now turning favourable there is a case where the fund flow can now turn positive? Shiv Puri: It is. One of the things that FIIs have seen is that a lot of the money comes from the US and if you look at the S&P 500 over the last 5, 10, 15, 20 years, it has delivered dollar returns comparable or even better than what the Indian equity markets have delivered in dollar terms. And then, of course, you have added impediments here in terms of taxes and things like that that maybe some of those institutions do not have to deal with. So, if you factor that in, it is dependent on two parts, one is, of course, how well India does, but the second is how well India does relative to the S&P 500 to the US.

French Prez rallies G7 leaders for de-escalation in Middle East, peace in Ukraine
French Prez rallies G7 leaders for de-escalation in Middle East, peace in Ukraine

Hans India

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French Prez rallies G7 leaders for de-escalation in Middle East, peace in Ukraine

French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday held a series of high-level meetings on the sidelines of the Group of Seven (G7) summit in Kananaskis, Canada, emphasising the urgent need to de-escalate the conflict between Israel and Iran, while calling for a revival of negotiations over Iran's nuclear programme. Macron met with several world leaders, including US President Donald Trump, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. His conversations focused on the volatile situation in the Middle East, the war in Ukraine, and deepening bilateral cooperation on strategic areas like defence, energy, and artificial intelligence. The G7 -- comprising Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union -- issued a joint statement from the summit, reaffirming their commitment to regional peace and stability in the Middle East while explicitly backing Israel's right to defend itself. The leaders called Iran the "principal source" of regional instability and terrorism. Macron met with US President Donald Trump and discussed the need for a ceasefire in the Russia-Ukraine war and the de-escalation between Iran and Israel. Both leaders also discussed stabilising their trade relations. "We also spoke about the pressure that must be exerted on Russia to achieve a ceasefire as soon as possible and to negotiate a lasting peace for Ukraine," Macron said in a post on the social media platform X. "We emphasised the urgent need for de-escalation between Israel and Iran. Only a rigorous negotiation will ensure that Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon and that safety is ensured for all in the Middle East. In this difficult context, I have not forgotten about Gaza. Israel must end the war. Hamas must release the hostages. Civilians must get relief," he added. The French President's meeting with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer also focused on the Gaza conflict and the stalled nuclear deal with Iran. "With Prime Minister Keir Starmer at the G7. A ceasefire for a strong and lasting peace in Ukraine. A ceasefire to end the war in Gaza, to free the hostages, to seek a political solution, and to bring peace for all. De-escalation and the resumption of negotiations on Iran's nuclear programme," Macron wrote on X. He added that the two nations share similar positions on major global challenges and that this cooperation would continue at the Franco-British Summit during his state visit to the UK on July 11. During his meeting with Canadian PM Mark Carney, Macron thanked Canada for hosting the summit and reaffirmed his commitment to strengthening the Franco-Canadian partnership. "During our meeting, I reaffirmed France's commitment to strengthening our partnership with Canada on defence, decarbonisation, and artificial intelligence. Together, as part of the coalition of the willing, we reiterated our determination to work toward a just and lasting peace in Ukraine. After Canada, it will be France's turn to take over the G7 presidency," Macron posted. Additionally, Macron also met Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and highlighted the strategic importance of the Franco-Japanese alliance. "Very pleased to meet the Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba at the G7. In recent years, we have built an exceptional partnership with Japan, driven by a friendship of the same nature. An essential partnership for peace, stability and global prosperity," Macron wrote. He said the scope of collaboration spans defence, critical materials, civil nuclear power, culture, and industrial cooperation. "A partnership for the future for our two countries and for our people… France is ready for it!" he added.

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