logo
Futures buoyant, dollar drifts as markets sail toward tariff storm

Futures buoyant, dollar drifts as markets sail toward tariff storm

Gulf Today24-03-2025
Financial markets made a mixed start on Monday with US stock futures rising but the dollar wavering ahead of a week driven by data, Chinese earnings and the threat of steep US tariff hikes on the horizon.
S&P 500 futures were up about 0.6% in the Asia morning and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.8%. Japan's Nikkei and Hong Kong's Hang Seng climbed about 0.2% The euro, which fell slightly last week, was up about 0.2% at $1.0835 in early trade. In emerging markets, Turkey's lira was on a knife's edge as the jailing of President Tayyip Erdogan's main rival unsettles investors.
Shares in Australia-listed fibre-cement maker James Hardie fell 12% after it said it would buy US outdoor building products maker AZEK Company for $8.8 billion in cash and stock.
The week holds global purchasing managers index gauges, the US Federal Reserve's preferred inflation reading, inflation data in Australia and Japan, a budget update in Britain and major earnings in China.
But it is likely to be updates on US President Donald Trump's plans to for global reciprocal tariffs from April 2 that drives markets, and after a volatile month for stocks, bonds and currencies, analysts said there is no obvious trade ahead.
'It's very difficult to really devise a structural playbook,' said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone.
'You've got to put your mind into the head of the consumer and households,' he said, since it has been fears of a slowdown in the world's biggest economy that has led to weeks of selling dollars and stocks and a strong rally for Treasuries.
'Anything that feeds into this higher probability of recession, higher probability of a stagflationary environment ... or that price pressures aren't transitory is where we start to get panicky a bit.' Trump has vowed to impose a complicated barrage of tariffs next week, the details of which are not clear save that they are to be calculated to reflect the impact of foreign tariffs as well as foreign value-added taxes on imports.
The S&P 500 eked out a gain on Friday after Trump hinted at flexibility, but after a rollercoaster first two months in power - including tariff hits on China, Mexico and Canada - traders are shy of betting that Trump is ready to cut deals.
Ten-year US Treasury yields have fallen nearly 40 basis points from mid-February highs and were last steady at 4.27% and investors have been drawn abroad from US stocks, with sharp rallies in Hong Kong and Europe as Wall Street fell.
Hong Kong shares are up 18% so far this year, the largest gain of any major market, but a drop of 4.4% over two sessions late last week pointed to a pause in the flow of money while traders consider their - and Trump's - next moves.
Earnings at automaker BYD, video platform Kuaishou as well as Chinese banks and several property developers will be in focus. In the US, discount retailer Dollar Tree and up-market athletic clothier Lululemon are on the calendar.
Gold sat just shy of last week's record high, buying $3,021 an ounce, while bitcoin held at $85,860.
'Cash and safe havens remain the counterbalance to any larger shift in strategy,' said Bob Savage, head of markets macro strategy at BNY in a note to clients.
'We expect a series of diplomatic meetings to avert extreme tariffs eventually, but not by April, leaving the sequencing concerns over Trump's policy shifts continuing to move markets with ongoing economic uncertainty.'
Copper prices rose on Monday as traders bought to ship to the United States, where President Donald Trump is threatening to impose tariffs on imports of the industrial metal.
Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME)traded 1.7% higher at $10,027 a metric tone in official rings after touching $10,044.50. Last week it hit $10,046.50 for its highest since October 3.
On COMEX, meanwhile, copper prices jumped to a record high of $5.1845 per lb, about $11,430 a tone. Traders said that movement of copper from the LME system to the United States can be seen in inventories held by warehouses in the exchange's network around the world.
Copper stocks in LME warehouses have dropped by 18% to 221,775 tonnes over the past four weeks. Cancelled warrants - metal earmarked for delivery - are at 50% of the total, suggesting a further 111,000 tonnes is due to leave LME warehouses.
Last month Trump ordered an investigation into potential new tariffs on copper imports to rebuild US production of a metal critical to electric vehicles, military hardware, the power grid and many consumer goods.
Trump's tariffs are intended to encourage local production of metal, but permits can be difficult to obtain for these operations and smelter construction can take years.
'The policy is intended to stimulate investment in the US industrial base - boosting local production and conversion capacity,' said Liberum analyst Tom Price.
'Perhaps in several years, the industry may respond. For now though, it has no choice but to continue importing these metals - and somehow accept, or pass on, the trade's new tariff cost.' Traders said that a Bloomberg report saying commodity trader Mercuria was estimating that 500,000 tonnes of copper was heading to the United States was also driving up prices.
Agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

S&P affirms 'AA+' credit rating for US, cites impact of tariff revenue
S&P affirms 'AA+' credit rating for US, cites impact of tariff revenue

Khaleej Times

time5 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

S&P affirms 'AA+' credit rating for US, cites impact of tariff revenue

S&P Global on Monday affirmed its "AA+" credit rating on the US, saying the revenue from President Donald Trump's tariffs will offset the fiscal hit from his massive tax-cut and spending bill. Trump signed the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" into law in July after it was passed by the Republican-controlled Congress. The bill, which delivered new tax breaks, also made Trump's 2017 tax cuts permanent. "Amid the rise in effective tariff rates, we expect meaningful tariff revenue to generally offset weaker fiscal outcomes that might otherwise be associated with the recent fiscal legislation, which contains both cuts and increases in tax and spending," S&P said in a statement. "At this time, it appears that meaningful tariff revenue has the potential to offset the deficit-raising aspects of the recent budget legislation." The U.S. reported a $21 billion jump in customs duty collections from Trump's tariffs in July, but the government budget deficit still grew nearly 20% in the same month to $291 billion. Interest on the public debt also continued to grow, hitting $1.013 trillion in the first 10 months of the fiscal year, an increase of 6%, or $57 billion, over the prior-year period due to slightly higher interest rates and increased debt levels. Since returning to power in January this year, Trump has launched a global trade war with a range of tariffs that have targeted individual products and countries. The Republican president has set a baseline tariff of 10% on all imports to the U.S., as well as additional duties on some items and trading partners. IMPACT OF TARIFFS S&P, which became the first ratings agency to cut the pristine U.S. government rating in 2011, said the outlook on the U.S. rating remains stable. The ratings agency said it expects the Federal Reserve, which Trump has criticized this year for not cutting interest rates, "to navigate the challenges of lowering domestic inflation and addressing financial market vulnerabilities." It projected the country's general government deficit to average 6.0% of GDP during the 2025-2028 period, down from 7.5% in 2024 and from an average 9.8% of GDP in 2020-2023. S&P said it could lower the rating over the next two to three years if already high deficits increase. "The ratings could also come under pressure if political developments weigh on the strength of American institutions and the effectiveness of long-term policymaking or independence of the Federal Reserve," it said. SP, however, said it could raise the U.S. rating in the event of sustained economic growth and adjustments to the U.S. fiscal profile that would diminish recent increases in the country's debt burden. There was no reaction in markets on Tuesday to SP's credit rating affirmation, which follows a U.S. sovereign credit downgrade by Moody's in May, when that ratings agency cut the triple-A U.S. rating by one notch, citing rising debt levels. The U.S. national debt load surged above a record $37 trillion last week. James Ragan, co-chief investment officer and director of investment management research at D.A. Davidson, said the SP rating affirmation was an acknowledgment of the meaningful tariff revenue generated so far. "That's all good revenue (coming) in, but that's also a drag on the economy, so I think we don't know the impact of that going forward," he said.

Apple defeats UK order that would give law enforcement access to encrypted user data
Apple defeats UK order that would give law enforcement access to encrypted user data

The National

time6 hours ago

  • The National

Apple defeats UK order that would give law enforcement access to encrypted user data

Apple has secured a victory in defeating a proposed mandate from the British government that would have required the company to provide backdoor access to user data uploaded to the cloud. The February order from the British government that mandated access to data, including encrypted data on cloud services, provoked fury from the US tech industry, which has accused the UK of Orwellian practices in policing online content. 'Over the past few months, I've been working closely with our partners in the UK, alongside President Trump and Vice President Vance to ensure Americans' private data remains private and our Constitutional rights and civil liberties are protected,' Tulsi Gabbard, US director of National Intelligence, announced on X on Tuesday. 'As a result, the UK has agreed to drop its mandate for Apple to provide a 'back door' that would have enabled access to the protected encrypted data of American citizens.' Technology tycoon and entrepreneur Elon Musk responded to Ms Gabbard's post with an arm flex emoji. Mr Musk has been highly critical of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his Labour Party over the backdoor data access policy. Apple has not yet responded to The National's requests for a comment on this story. According to The Washington Post, which first broke the story about the law colloquially known as the 'Snoopers' Charter', the proposed legislation would have made it a criminal offence for a company to reveal that the government had made a request to access data. The policy push is not unique to the UK, with police and security services around the world advocating for more access to encrypted communications in recent years, warning that encryption can benefit criminals. For Apple, the matter has proven to be particularly sensitive, given the company's significant marketing emphasis on user privacy. In 2016, the US-based consumer technology company challenged a federal magistrate's order to unlock an iPhone used in the San Bernardino, California, terrorist attack. At the time, Apple chief executive Tim Cook argued that such a move would undermine encryption by creating a backdoor that could potentially be used on other future devices. 'The government is asking Apple to hack our own users and undermine decades of security advancements that protect our customers – including tens of millions of American citizens – from sophisticated hackers and cybercriminals,' he said. 'We can find no precedent for an American company being forced to expose its customers to a greater risk of attack.' He added that the demand threatened the security of Apple's customers and had 'implications far beyond the legal case at hand'. During prosecution, the FBI announced that it had found its own way to access the iPhone data for the accused terror suspects. As far back as 2010, when Apple's co-founder Steve Jobs was still at the helm of the company, Apple was considered to be significantly more stringent than other Silicon Valley companies when it came to protecting user privacy. 'A lot of people think we're old fashioned about this,' Mr Jobs said during the D8 conference that same year. 'We take privacy extremely seriously.' Some, however, have questioned whether Apple's commitment to privacy is more style than substance, and whether it is just an attempt to sell more devices and services. 'Privacy … that's iPhone,' the advertisement concludes.

85% of UAE retail investors back local stocks: eToro survey
85% of UAE retail investors back local stocks: eToro survey

Al Etihad

time8 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

85% of UAE retail investors back local stocks: eToro survey

19 Aug 2025 17:50 DUBAI (WAM) A whopping 85% of UAE-based retail investors are currently invested in local stocks, and many are buying even more in response to global trade tensions, based on the latest edition of the UAE Retail Investor Beat by trading and investing platform study, which surveyed 1,000 retail investors across the United Arab Emirates, revealed that UAE-based investors are strong supporters of their local market. 85% are currently invested in locally listed equities, with 39% of respondents holding Abu Dhabi stocks, 28% holding Dubai stocks, and 18% holding investments reflect their confidence in the UAE economy - 63% of investors stated they are 'very confident' in its current performance, and a further 29% indicated they are 'somewhat confident'. When it comes to the long-term performance of locally listed stocks, 59% expressed that they are 'very confident', with a further 32 % who are 'somewhat confident'.Looking ahead, 48% of investors forecast significant gains in the UAE stock market over the next 12 months, while 34% expect steady conviction is also evident in investors' long-term expectations. 58% believe that the Middle East will deliver the most substantial returns over the next five years, followed closely by the US (50%).When asked which UAE sectors evoke the most optimism for investments over the next 12 months, real estate topped the list at 55%, followed by technology (48%), financial services (37%), and energy (37%).Commenting on the findings, George Naddaf, Managing Director at eToro MENA, shared, 'The DFM and ADX are among the best-performing stock exchanges in the world this year, outperforming the S&P 500 by a considerable margin. Against this backdrop, our research confirms that investor confidence in the UAE market remains strong, supported by resilient performance across local indices, solid macroeconomic indicators, and sustained earnings across key sectors."Investors are favouring real estate, technology, financial services, and energy, as these sectors continue to benefit from government-backed initiatives. The fact that 85% are already invested in UAE equities reflects a clear preference for local opportunities in the current environment.'Despite strong confidence in their local market, geopolitical risk is firmly on the minds of investors: 90% say tariffs and trade wars will significantly impact their portfolios in the next six months, and 89% have already adjusted or plan to adjust their investments in the most common way investors are adjusting their portfolios in response to trade tensions is by increasing exposure to UAE equities (53%), a close second is increasing allocations to commodities (51%). This corresponds with respondents choosing gold or precious metals as the most resilient type of asset in a volatile trade environment (49%). Crypto (45%) was the second-most popular option, and it is already the most held asset class among UAE investors, currently with 54% Naddaf added, 'With 90% of investors anticipating an impact from tariffs and trade wars, and 89% adjusting their portfolios accordingly, UAE investors show an impressive level of adaptability. Besides local stocks, many are reallocating towards commodities such as gold and oil, which are viewed as reliable hedges against external volatility. This suggests a disciplined, dual-track approach: reinforcing exposure to domestic markets that are shielded from the impact of tariffs, while managing risk through defensive asset classes.' Uncertainty is not deterring investors from continuing to seek opportunities in the market. 65% of UAE retail investors have already increased contributions to their investment portfolios over the previous months, and 76% expect to increase contributions over the next three months. Stock Markets Continue full coverage

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store