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Wall Street futures and the dollar drop on Trump tariff tumult

Wall Street futures and the dollar drop on Trump tariff tumult
Wall Street futures and the dollar drop on Trump tariff tumult

Wall Street futures, and the dollar, slid Monday due to confusion about U.S. Trade Policy. This was after President Donald Trump's new 15% tariff as a result of the Supreme Court ruling against his sweeping approach on trade levies.

Gold rose along with other'safe-haven' currencies such as the Japanese and Swiss Francs. European stock futures fell as investors tried to understand the implications of the global economy, but shares in Hong Kong rose on the assumption that U.S. Tariffs on China may fall.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled against Trump's emergency tariffs Friday. This led the president to announce a 10% rate for the rest of world on Saturday, and then increase it to 15%.

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

"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 it again."

S&P 500 Futures dropped 0.5%, and Nasdaq 'futures fell 0.6%.

The U.S. Stock Markets will also be tested by Nvidia's earnings later this week. This chip designer accounts for almost 8% in the S&P 500 Index.

The dollar dropped 0.21% against the yen, to 154.76. Meanwhile, the euro rose by 0.23% to $1.1800.

The dollar fell 0.34% against the Swiss franc, while gold rose 0.6% to $5134 per ounce and silver rose by 2% to $86.23 an ounce.

AVERAGE TARIFF RATES DROPS

There was no clear indication of when new tariffs were to be implemented, what would be excluded, and whether all countries would face a 15% tax. Some countries, such as the UK and Australia had tariff rates of 10% under the old rules, while other Asian countries had higher rates.

Yale Budget Lab reported that the overall average tariff rate will be 13.7% following Trump's announcement Saturday. This is down from the 16% before the Supreme Court ruling, which was the highest since 1935.

The statement said that the 15% tariffs would expire 150 days after the 1974 Trade Act, under which they were imposed. If this is the case, then the average rate will fall to 9.1%.

The STOXX 600 Index fell 0.19% in Europe, while the DAX index in Germany dropped 0.36%. Britain's FTSE 100 was down 0.1%.

Tomas Hildebrandt is senior portfolio manager for?Evli, in Helsinki. He said: "Trump will be?Trump. He won't abandon the America first mantra. And he will continue to push the limits so long as he remains in power."

"There may be some relief to some European exporters but the Trump administration's tough anti-European attitude isn't going away."

The MSCI Asia Index, which excludes Japan, rose by 0.83%.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose 2.53%, partly because of expectations that China would face lower tariffs following the ruling. Goldman Sachs analysts said China could see a drop of 6.6 percentage points in its tariff rate.

Japan's Nikkei closed for the holiday, but futures prices fell by 0.4%.

Brent crude oil fell 1.1%, to $70.97 per barrel. This reversed some of the gains made last week after Trump announced that the U.S. would strike Iran in response to a massive build-up of forces across the region. On Thursday, further U.S.-Iran discussions are planned.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury fell by one basis point, to 4,077%. Prices and yields are inversely related. (Reporting from Harry Robertson, London; and Wayne Cole, Sydney; Additional reporting provided by Danilo Masoni. Editing by Lincoln Feast & Susan Fenton).

(source: Reuters)