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Wall St futures dollar drops amid US tariff turmoil

Wall Street futures in Asia and the dollar fell on Monday, as confusion about U.S. trade tariffs prompted the "sell America's" trade. Meanwhile, the tech-diva Nvidia is set to release its results this week. This will test the confidence of the AI sector. Gold prices dropped and gold grew ahead of the next round of talks between the United States and Iran, which will take place in Geneva on Friday. The risk of U.S. strikes remains if there is no agreement. After the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against President Donald Trump's emergency duties, uncertainty grew. He announced a new rate of 10% on the rest, but then increased it to 15%.

Rodrigo Catril is a senior FX Strategist at NAB. He said, "The tariff landscape has become more uncertain. Uncertainty is bad news for any market or economy."

"Unless common sense prevails we could enter a circular procedure where new tariffs announced are then possibly overturned only to have new tariffs announced and?we do the same dance again."

There was no clear indication of when the tariffs would come into effect, what would be excluded, or if every country would get a 15% tax. Several countries, such as the UK and Australia, had tariff rates of 10% under the old rules. However, many other Asian countries had higher rates.

In a light trade, Asian markets showed mixed results. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan rose 0.8%.

The Nikkei closed for the holiday, but futures fell 1.0% to 56,605 against a close cash of 56,825.

South Korea's bull run was extended by a 1.2% rise after a 5.5% jump last week. Taiwan rose by 1.2%, reaching a new record high.

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In Europe, EUROSTOXX Futures and DAX Futures both eased by 0.5% while FTSE Futures declined by 0.1%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq Futures both fell by 0.7% ahead of Nvidia's earnings, which will be a big deal since the tech giant makes up almost 8% in the S&P 500.

Estimates range from $6.28 up to $9.68. Options suggest that its shares could move at least 6% either way on the announcement.

The tariff news had a negative impact on the Treasury market, as it increased the risk that the U.S. Government would be forced to refund around $170 billion of revenue. On paper, this would increase the fiscal deficit by half a point, or 6.6%, of GDP.

Cash Treasuries did not trade in Japan due to the holiday, but 10-year notes futures were down 2 ticks. Mixed data had also pushed the market in two directions, with the economic growth falling short of forecasts for the December quarter but core inflation rising.

The probability of the Federal Reserve cutting rates in June dropped to 52% from 60% a few weeks ago. This has led to a stronger dollar for the week.

The dollar was under pressure on Monday amid speculation that the tariff chaos could cause investors to lose confidence in U.S. assets.

The dollar lost 0.6% against the Japanese yen, reaching 154.06, and the euro gained 0.4% to $1.1826.

The dollar also lost 0.6% against the Swiss franc, falling to 0.7716. Meanwhile, Bitcoin's selling spread fell by 4.6% to $64,478.

Gold gained 1.0% on the commodity markets as a result of a bid for safe havens. Silver rose 3.2% to $87.25 an ounce after a nearly 8% increase on Friday.

Oil prices are choppy and have eroded some of the gains from last week, when Trump stated that the U.S. military would be able to strike specific targets within Iran if there was no nuclear agreement.

Brent crude fell by 1.1%, to $70.94 per barrel. U.S. crude dropped 1.2%, to $65.71 a barrel. (Reporting and editing by Lincoln Feast; Reporting by Wayne Cole)

(source: Reuters)