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China retaliates against Trump tariffs by dumping oil and stocks

The Nasdaq Composite is heading towards a bear market as China retaliated against U.S. president Donald Trump's new tariffs, and concerns about a trade war escalated.

The fact that the U.S. economy created far more jobs in March than was expected did not brighten the mood.

China responded to Trump's new tariffs by announcing that it would add an additional 34% tax on American goods. This confirms investor fears of a global trade war.

Trump imposed a 10% tariff Wednesday on the majority of U.S. imports, and even higher levies against dozens of other countries. This is the most severe trade barrier in over 100 years.

Rick Meckler is a partner at Cherry Lane Investments in New Vernon, New Jersey, an investment family office.

"The details are getting more and more complex, which is dangerous for the companies.

Investors rushed to government bonds for safety, and traders increased their bets that the Federal Reserve would cut rates.

Companies that have exposure to China fell as well. Apple, Nvidia, and Amazon.com were all down sharply.

Globally, bank shares fell as concerns about a recession grew. S&P 500 Financial Index was down by 5.1% on Saturday.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1,230.72, or 3.04% to 39,315.21, while the S&P 500 declined 190.89, or 3.54% to 5,205.34, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 604.27 points, 3.59% to 15,954.66.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 30.80 points or 3.81% to 776.84. The pan-European STOXX Index fell 5.2%.

Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 2.8% overnight for a second session running.

U.S. crude fell 8.5% to $61.24 per barrel. Brent dropped 7.66%, falling to $64.77 a barrel.

After the non-farm payroll data, the U.S. Dollar recovered against the Euro and reduced losses versus yen. The dollar index rose 0.5% Friday, after its worst fall since November 20,22 on Thursday.

Nonfarm payrolls rose by 228,000 last month. Economists predicted payrolls would rise by 135,000.

Last week, the euro fell 0.47% to $1.0998. The dollar fell 0.4% against the Japanese yen to 145.47.

Investors are unsure where to invest their money after years of massive flows into U.S. stock markets and an booming American economy.

This helped to drive a strong rush towards the government bond markets. The yield of the 10-year Treasury bill, which is considered to be a benchmark in the U.S., fell by 12.2 basis points from 3.86% to 3.933%. Prices and yields are inversely related.

Traders expect central banks to adopt more accommodating policies. Money market futures are pricing in a cumulative Federal Reserve rate cut of 110 basis points by the end this year. This is compared to about 75 basis points a week ago.

The traders also increased their bets for Bank of England and European Central Bank decreases.

Meckler stated that "a lot of investors who I have spoken to said, in this type of environment, we should just go cash and wait,"

(source: Reuters)