Latest News

MORNING BID EUROPE - Trump fumes at the world after his tariffs fall short

Is this the Art of the Deal, Gregor Stuart Hunter? U.S. president Donald Trump warned that trade partners should not "play games" and back out of recently agreed trade agreements after the Supreme Court ruled against his 'emergency tariffs.

Some foreign governments want to check if they still have the same terms that were originally negotiated.

Trump will "come out smokin'" in his State of the Union Address on Tuesday, after the tariff setback. He may even take aim at the Supreme Court Justices who are seated there. However, governments in Asia still have concerns. Japan wants to know if the treatment of 'the nation under a new U.S. Tariff regime will be as favorable as an agreement that was reached between both sides last year. Taiwan wants assurances that the U.S. will not alter the favorable terms they have already agreed. China, not wanting to be outdone in the trade wars in Washington, banned the export of dual-use goods to 20 Japanese entities it claims have military ties, to curb Japan's "remilitarisation".

The markets in Japan and China have largely ignored the dispute. They gained a boost as they reopened following local holidays, and caught up with the Friday trade news. Both the Nikkei 225 index and CSI 300 index gained more than 1%.

Other markets in Asia have stabilised following the Wall Street selloff that was attributed by some analysts to Citrini Research's "doomsday analysis" released earlier in the week. Citrini Research presented a?"vision of the _damage AI could cause on the global economic system in the coming years. U.S. S&P 500 e-mini futures recovered, ?rising 0.3%.

The AI supply chain has also pushed benchmarks for?Taiwan, South Korea and MSCI's Asia-Pacific broadest index outside Japan to new highs.

Early European futures showed a 0.3% increase in the last trade. German DAX futures rose by 0.2% and FTSE Futures fell 0.1%.

Key developments on Tuesday that could impact the markets

Earnings of the company

Home Depot, Workday, Telefonica, Endesa

Economic Events

France: business confidence for February

Debt auctions:

UK 7-year government debt

(source: Reuters)