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The Advertiser
26-05-2025
- Business
- The Advertiser
Asian stocks, euro gain after Trump delays EU tariffs
Stock markets across Asia have edged higher and the euro has rallied after President Donald Trump abruptly extended by more than a month his threat to slap 50 per cent tariffs on EU goods, marking another temporary reprieve as part of his erratic trade policy. Trump agreed on Sunday to extend his deadline for trade talks until July 9, from the June 1 deadline he set on Friday, after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc needed more time to "reach a good deal". Market sentiment had been steadying after a sharp selloff across most assets last month as Trump paused his growth-denting tariffs and investors were keen on fresh trade deals after a pact with UK and a temporary agreement with China. However, Trump's latest policy moves were a reminder to investors how quickly circumstances could change and analysts have been pointing out that investors are shifting their money out of the US to Europe and Asia as they price in a possible US recession and a consequent global slowdown. "(The tariffs are) well above the 20 per cent original reciprocal tariff on the EU. The US, EU, and China account for 60 per cent of global GDP and so this escalation bodes ill for the entire world," analysts at Brown Brothers Harriman said in a note. Apple was also caught in the trade crossfire on Friday, after Trump threatened a 25 per cent levy on all imported iPhones bought by US consumers. On Monday, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 0.12 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei was marginally higher. Trading volumes on Monday are expected to be thin given that markets in the United States and the United Kingdom are closed due to public holidays. Japan's Nippon Steel's jumped 4.3 per cent after Trump on Friday expressed support for the company's $US14.9 billion ($A22.8 billion) bid for US Steel, saying their "planned partnership" would create jobs and help the American economy. Shares of US Steel soared 21 per cent on Friday. Super-long Japanese bonds will be in focus, with inflation data expected later in the week as investors try to gauge the Bank of Japan's monetary policy outlook. Yields on the tenors hit record levels last week. Ballooning debt levels in developed economies were also brought back into focus following Moody's credit rating downgrade of the United States and weak debt auctions in the US and Japan last week. China's blue-chip index slipped 0.2 per cent in early trading on Monday, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dipped 0.4 per cent. Among currencies, the euro strengthened 0.3 per cent to $1.1397 to touch its highest since April 30, while the greenback recovered as much as 0.3 per cent to 143.085 yen, after diving one per cent on Friday. On Wednesday, an earnings report from artificial intelligence bellwether Nvidia will be in the spotlight - the last of the "Magnificent Seven" group of growth stocks that had spearheaded a more than two-year US bull market. Analysts said the semiconductor giant's quarterly report could be the next catalyst for markets, given its forecasts are seen as an indication of demand for tech infrastructure. Nvidia's shares are down more than two per cent this year after investors took notice of cheaper Chinese AI models in the aftermath of DeepSeek's release, while CEO Jensen Huang has flagged that US export curbs will also hit sales. Reuters reported on Saturday that Nvidia will launch a new AI chipset for China at a significantly lower price, subject to US government approval. On the commodities front, crude prices traded higher, while gold eased marginally from a two-week high. Stock markets across Asia have edged higher and the euro has rallied after President Donald Trump abruptly extended by more than a month his threat to slap 50 per cent tariffs on EU goods, marking another temporary reprieve as part of his erratic trade policy. Trump agreed on Sunday to extend his deadline for trade talks until July 9, from the June 1 deadline he set on Friday, after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc needed more time to "reach a good deal". Market sentiment had been steadying after a sharp selloff across most assets last month as Trump paused his growth-denting tariffs and investors were keen on fresh trade deals after a pact with UK and a temporary agreement with China. However, Trump's latest policy moves were a reminder to investors how quickly circumstances could change and analysts have been pointing out that investors are shifting their money out of the US to Europe and Asia as they price in a possible US recession and a consequent global slowdown. "(The tariffs are) well above the 20 per cent original reciprocal tariff on the EU. The US, EU, and China account for 60 per cent of global GDP and so this escalation bodes ill for the entire world," analysts at Brown Brothers Harriman said in a note. Apple was also caught in the trade crossfire on Friday, after Trump threatened a 25 per cent levy on all imported iPhones bought by US consumers. On Monday, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 0.12 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei was marginally higher. Trading volumes on Monday are expected to be thin given that markets in the United States and the United Kingdom are closed due to public holidays. Japan's Nippon Steel's jumped 4.3 per cent after Trump on Friday expressed support for the company's $US14.9 billion ($A22.8 billion) bid for US Steel, saying their "planned partnership" would create jobs and help the American economy. Shares of US Steel soared 21 per cent on Friday. Super-long Japanese bonds will be in focus, with inflation data expected later in the week as investors try to gauge the Bank of Japan's monetary policy outlook. Yields on the tenors hit record levels last week. Ballooning debt levels in developed economies were also brought back into focus following Moody's credit rating downgrade of the United States and weak debt auctions in the US and Japan last week. China's blue-chip index slipped 0.2 per cent in early trading on Monday, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dipped 0.4 per cent. Among currencies, the euro strengthened 0.3 per cent to $1.1397 to touch its highest since April 30, while the greenback recovered as much as 0.3 per cent to 143.085 yen, after diving one per cent on Friday. On Wednesday, an earnings report from artificial intelligence bellwether Nvidia will be in the spotlight - the last of the "Magnificent Seven" group of growth stocks that had spearheaded a more than two-year US bull market. Analysts said the semiconductor giant's quarterly report could be the next catalyst for markets, given its forecasts are seen as an indication of demand for tech infrastructure. Nvidia's shares are down more than two per cent this year after investors took notice of cheaper Chinese AI models in the aftermath of DeepSeek's release, while CEO Jensen Huang has flagged that US export curbs will also hit sales. Reuters reported on Saturday that Nvidia will launch a new AI chipset for China at a significantly lower price, subject to US government approval. On the commodities front, crude prices traded higher, while gold eased marginally from a two-week high. Stock markets across Asia have edged higher and the euro has rallied after President Donald Trump abruptly extended by more than a month his threat to slap 50 per cent tariffs on EU goods, marking another temporary reprieve as part of his erratic trade policy. Trump agreed on Sunday to extend his deadline for trade talks until July 9, from the June 1 deadline he set on Friday, after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc needed more time to "reach a good deal". Market sentiment had been steadying after a sharp selloff across most assets last month as Trump paused his growth-denting tariffs and investors were keen on fresh trade deals after a pact with UK and a temporary agreement with China. However, Trump's latest policy moves were a reminder to investors how quickly circumstances could change and analysts have been pointing out that investors are shifting their money out of the US to Europe and Asia as they price in a possible US recession and a consequent global slowdown. "(The tariffs are) well above the 20 per cent original reciprocal tariff on the EU. The US, EU, and China account for 60 per cent of global GDP and so this escalation bodes ill for the entire world," analysts at Brown Brothers Harriman said in a note. Apple was also caught in the trade crossfire on Friday, after Trump threatened a 25 per cent levy on all imported iPhones bought by US consumers. On Monday, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 0.12 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei was marginally higher. Trading volumes on Monday are expected to be thin given that markets in the United States and the United Kingdom are closed due to public holidays. Japan's Nippon Steel's jumped 4.3 per cent after Trump on Friday expressed support for the company's $US14.9 billion ($A22.8 billion) bid for US Steel, saying their "planned partnership" would create jobs and help the American economy. Shares of US Steel soared 21 per cent on Friday. Super-long Japanese bonds will be in focus, with inflation data expected later in the week as investors try to gauge the Bank of Japan's monetary policy outlook. Yields on the tenors hit record levels last week. Ballooning debt levels in developed economies were also brought back into focus following Moody's credit rating downgrade of the United States and weak debt auctions in the US and Japan last week. China's blue-chip index slipped 0.2 per cent in early trading on Monday, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dipped 0.4 per cent. Among currencies, the euro strengthened 0.3 per cent to $1.1397 to touch its highest since April 30, while the greenback recovered as much as 0.3 per cent to 143.085 yen, after diving one per cent on Friday. On Wednesday, an earnings report from artificial intelligence bellwether Nvidia will be in the spotlight - the last of the "Magnificent Seven" group of growth stocks that had spearheaded a more than two-year US bull market. Analysts said the semiconductor giant's quarterly report could be the next catalyst for markets, given its forecasts are seen as an indication of demand for tech infrastructure. Nvidia's shares are down more than two per cent this year after investors took notice of cheaper Chinese AI models in the aftermath of DeepSeek's release, while CEO Jensen Huang has flagged that US export curbs will also hit sales. Reuters reported on Saturday that Nvidia will launch a new AI chipset for China at a significantly lower price, subject to US government approval. On the commodities front, crude prices traded higher, while gold eased marginally from a two-week high. Stock markets across Asia have edged higher and the euro has rallied after President Donald Trump abruptly extended by more than a month his threat to slap 50 per cent tariffs on EU goods, marking another temporary reprieve as part of his erratic trade policy. Trump agreed on Sunday to extend his deadline for trade talks until July 9, from the June 1 deadline he set on Friday, after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc needed more time to "reach a good deal". Market sentiment had been steadying after a sharp selloff across most assets last month as Trump paused his growth-denting tariffs and investors were keen on fresh trade deals after a pact with UK and a temporary agreement with China. However, Trump's latest policy moves were a reminder to investors how quickly circumstances could change and analysts have been pointing out that investors are shifting their money out of the US to Europe and Asia as they price in a possible US recession and a consequent global slowdown. "(The tariffs are) well above the 20 per cent original reciprocal tariff on the EU. The US, EU, and China account for 60 per cent of global GDP and so this escalation bodes ill for the entire world," analysts at Brown Brothers Harriman said in a note. Apple was also caught in the trade crossfire on Friday, after Trump threatened a 25 per cent levy on all imported iPhones bought by US consumers. On Monday, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 0.12 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei was marginally higher. Trading volumes on Monday are expected to be thin given that markets in the United States and the United Kingdom are closed due to public holidays. Japan's Nippon Steel's jumped 4.3 per cent after Trump on Friday expressed support for the company's $US14.9 billion ($A22.8 billion) bid for US Steel, saying their "planned partnership" would create jobs and help the American economy. Shares of US Steel soared 21 per cent on Friday. Super-long Japanese bonds will be in focus, with inflation data expected later in the week as investors try to gauge the Bank of Japan's monetary policy outlook. Yields on the tenors hit record levels last week. Ballooning debt levels in developed economies were also brought back into focus following Moody's credit rating downgrade of the United States and weak debt auctions in the US and Japan last week. China's blue-chip index slipped 0.2 per cent in early trading on Monday, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dipped 0.4 per cent. Among currencies, the euro strengthened 0.3 per cent to $1.1397 to touch its highest since April 30, while the greenback recovered as much as 0.3 per cent to 143.085 yen, after diving one per cent on Friday. On Wednesday, an earnings report from artificial intelligence bellwether Nvidia will be in the spotlight - the last of the "Magnificent Seven" group of growth stocks that had spearheaded a more than two-year US bull market. Analysts said the semiconductor giant's quarterly report could be the next catalyst for markets, given its forecasts are seen as an indication of demand for tech infrastructure. Nvidia's shares are down more than two per cent this year after investors took notice of cheaper Chinese AI models in the aftermath of DeepSeek's release, while CEO Jensen Huang has flagged that US export curbs will also hit sales. Reuters reported on Saturday that Nvidia will launch a new AI chipset for China at a significantly lower price, subject to US government approval. On the commodities front, crude prices traded higher, while gold eased marginally from a two-week high.


West Australian
26-05-2025
- Business
- West Australian
Asian stocks, euro gain after Trump delays EU tariffs
Stock markets across Asia have edged higher and the euro has rallied after President Donald Trump abruptly extended by more than a month his threat to slap 50 per cent tariffs on EU goods, marking another temporary reprieve as part of his erratic trade policy. Trump agreed on Sunday to extend his deadline for trade talks until July 9, from the June 1 deadline he set on Friday, after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc needed more time to "reach a good deal". Market sentiment had been steadying after a sharp selloff across most assets last month as Trump paused his growth-denting tariffs and investors were keen on fresh trade deals after a pact with UK and a temporary agreement with China. However, Trump's latest policy moves were a reminder to investors how quickly circumstances could change and analysts have been pointing out that investors are shifting their money out of the US to Europe and Asia as they price in a possible US recession and a consequent global slowdown. "(The tariffs are) well above the 20 per cent original reciprocal tariff on the EU. The US, EU, and China account for 60 per cent of global GDP and so this escalation bodes ill for the entire world," analysts at Brown Brothers Harriman said in a note. Apple was also caught in the trade crossfire on Friday, after Trump threatened a 25 per cent levy on all imported iPhones bought by US consumers. On Monday, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 0.12 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei was marginally higher. Trading volumes on Monday are expected to be thin given that markets in the United States and the United Kingdom are closed due to public holidays. Japan's Nippon Steel's jumped 4.3 per cent after Trump on Friday expressed support for the company's $US14.9 billion ($A22.8 billion) bid for US Steel, saying their "planned partnership" would create jobs and help the American economy. Shares of US Steel soared 21 per cent on Friday. Super-long Japanese bonds will be in focus, with inflation data expected later in the week as investors try to gauge the Bank of Japan's monetary policy outlook. Yields on the tenors hit record levels last week. Ballooning debt levels in developed economies were also brought back into focus following Moody's credit rating downgrade of the United States and weak debt auctions in the US and Japan last week. China's blue-chip index slipped 0.2 per cent in early trading on Monday, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dipped 0.4 per cent. Among currencies, the euro strengthened 0.3 per cent to $1.1397 to touch its highest since April 30, while the greenback recovered as much as 0.3 per cent to 143.085 yen, after diving one per cent on Friday. On Wednesday, an earnings report from artificial intelligence bellwether Nvidia will be in the spotlight - the last of the "Magnificent Seven" group of growth stocks that had spearheaded a more than two-year US bull market. Analysts said the semiconductor giant's quarterly report could be the next catalyst for markets, given its forecasts are seen as an indication of demand for tech infrastructure. Nvidia's shares are down more than two per cent this year after investors took notice of cheaper Chinese AI models in the aftermath of DeepSeek's release, while CEO Jensen Huang has flagged that US export curbs will also hit sales. Reuters reported on Saturday that Nvidia will launch a new AI chipset for China at a significantly lower price, subject to US government approval. On the commodities front, crude prices traded higher, while gold eased marginally from a two-week high.


Perth Now
26-05-2025
- Business
- Perth Now
Asian stocks, euro gain after Trump delays EU tariffs
Stock markets across Asia have edged higher and the euro has rallied after President Donald Trump abruptly extended by more than a month his threat to slap 50 per cent tariffs on EU goods, marking another temporary reprieve as part of his erratic trade policy. Trump agreed on Sunday to extend his deadline for trade talks until July 9, from the June 1 deadline he set on Friday, after European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc needed more time to "reach a good deal". Market sentiment had been steadying after a sharp selloff across most assets last month as Trump paused his growth-denting tariffs and investors were keen on fresh trade deals after a pact with UK and a temporary agreement with China. However, Trump's latest policy moves were a reminder to investors how quickly circumstances could change and analysts have been pointing out that investors are shifting their money out of the US to Europe and Asia as they price in a possible US recession and a consequent global slowdown. "(The tariffs are) well above the 20 per cent original reciprocal tariff on the EU. The US, EU, and China account for 60 per cent of global GDP and so this escalation bodes ill for the entire world," analysts at Brown Brothers Harriman said in a note. Apple was also caught in the trade crossfire on Friday, after Trump threatened a 25 per cent levy on all imported iPhones bought by US consumers. On Monday, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 0.12 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei was marginally higher. Trading volumes on Monday are expected to be thin given that markets in the United States and the United Kingdom are closed due to public holidays. Japan's Nippon Steel's jumped 4.3 per cent after Trump on Friday expressed support for the company's $US14.9 billion ($A22.8 billion) bid for US Steel, saying their "planned partnership" would create jobs and help the American economy. Shares of US Steel soared 21 per cent on Friday. Super-long Japanese bonds will be in focus, with inflation data expected later in the week as investors try to gauge the Bank of Japan's monetary policy outlook. Yields on the tenors hit record levels last week. Ballooning debt levels in developed economies were also brought back into focus following Moody's credit rating downgrade of the United States and weak debt auctions in the US and Japan last week. China's blue-chip index slipped 0.2 per cent in early trading on Monday, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dipped 0.4 per cent. Among currencies, the euro strengthened 0.3 per cent to $1.1397 to touch its highest since April 30, while the greenback recovered as much as 0.3 per cent to 143.085 yen, after diving one per cent on Friday. On Wednesday, an earnings report from artificial intelligence bellwether Nvidia will be in the spotlight - the last of the "Magnificent Seven" group of growth stocks that had spearheaded a more than two-year US bull market. Analysts said the semiconductor giant's quarterly report could be the next catalyst for markets, given its forecasts are seen as an indication of demand for tech infrastructure. Nvidia's shares are down more than two per cent this year after investors took notice of cheaper Chinese AI models in the aftermath of DeepSeek's release, while CEO Jensen Huang has flagged that US export curbs will also hit sales. Reuters reported on Saturday that Nvidia will launch a new AI chipset for China at a significantly lower price, subject to US government approval. On the commodities front, crude prices traded higher, while gold eased marginally from a two-week high.