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Markets take stock of Trump’s U-turns as the relief rally fades away

Investors struggled to sort through the noise of the Trump administration, its erratic stance on tariffs, and the Federal Reserve leadership.

In the past week, U.S. president Donald Trump has attacked Fed chair Jerome Powell, then retracted his calls for resignation. Investors are still unsure about the final state of tariffs against China, despite the many headlines surrounding it.

A source said on Wednesday that, in the absence of talks with Beijing, the Trump administration was looking at lowering tariffs for imported Chinese goods. This follows a Wall Street Journal article that suggested that Trump's White House might consider reducing tariffs on Chinese imports.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent later said that such a step would not be taken unilaterally. He echoed comments made by White House spokesperson KarolineLeavitt.

I don't believe you'll ever be able to get used the flip-flopping and haphazard behavior we've seen. Tony Sycamore is a market analyst for IG. He said that it was extreme. "I think Trump is like that - he wants the best levers and he doesn't fear trying anything. He's not afraid to walk it back either if it fails."

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan fell by 0.72%. This was in contrast to the Wall Street trend, which saw stocks rise on Wednesday amid hopes of a reduction of Sino-U.S. tensions.

U.S. Futures pared their gains made earlier in the session. Nasdaq futures lost 0.32%, and S&P500 futures fell 0.23%. The EUROSTOXX futures fluctuated between gains and losses to end the session flat. FTSE Futures slipped 0.04%.

The Nikkei ticked up 0.4%.

Two sources familiar with this matter confirmed on Thursday that Ryosei Acazawa, Japan's chief tariff negotiator, is finalizing plans to visit the United States in April to have a second round with his counterpart.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell more than 1%, while the CSI300 blue chip index in China was only up 0.06%.

China's governor of the central bank said Wednesday, in Washington D.C. that the country will support the free-trade rules and multilateral trading system.

Salman Ahmed is the global head of strategic asset allocation and macro at Fidelity. He said: "Short-term volatilities are quite extreme. This high volatility will continue. You have elevated volatility moving forward because the fundamental rules of the game, the economic world, are changing."

Ahmed said this on the sidelines the IMAS Investment Conference 2025 and Masterclass in Singapore.

On Wednesday, Katsunobu Kato, the Japanese Finance Minister, urged his G20 counterparts for cooperation in stabilising the markets. He warned that U.S. Tariffs and countermeasures by certain countries are hurting global economic growth and destabilising finance markets.

Investor confidence in U.S. asset prices remained fragile, despite the dollar's recent recovery.

The dollar dropped 0.5% against the yen to 142.75. The euro rose 0.25% to $1.1341 while the Swiss Franc rose 0.3%, or 0.8281 per US dollar.

The 30-year yield was little changed, at 4.7960 percent.

The benchmark 10-year rate was down 3.5 points at 4.3578%.

Beth Hammack, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, said that on Wednesday there is still a lot of uncertainty about the future. She urged the central bank to be cautious in its monetary policy and to monitor the economy's performance.

The markets are expecting a rate cut of around 80 basis points by December.

Oil prices have stabilized in other markets after a drop in the previous session. Sources said that OPEC+ will consider accelerating their oil production increases in June.

Brent crude futures rose 0.1% to $66.19 per barrel while U.S. Crude also gained 0.14%, to $62.36 a barrel.

Gold continued its march towards a new record high. The yellow metal rose 1.1% to $3,324.23 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)