Latest News

Dollar down on tariff reductions as stocks hover near recent highs

The global stock markets were near record highs Friday, and European indexes are set to make their eighth consecutive weekly gain after U.S. president Donald Trump announced that reciprocal tariffs will not be immediately implemented, suggesting there is room for negotiation.

Trump's plan to impose tariffs against every country that taxes U.S. imports has stoked concerns of a broad-ranging trade conflict, driving gold prices up to a new record high this week. Gold prices were set to rise for the seventh consecutive week.

Trump's directive on Thursday did not impose new tariffs. Instead, it sparked an investigation that could last weeks or even months into the levies placed on U.S. products by other trading partners. Then a response was formulated.

The analysts at Barclays said that the delay does not necessarily reflect a reduced likelihood of the tariffs being imposed.

Trump started a trade conflict by first imposing tariffs against Mexico and Canada, then pausing the duties, but continuing to impose them on Chinese products.

Michael Brown, Senior Research Strategist at Pepperstone said: "It appears that Trump's bark is worse than his bite in the area of trade."

The yo-yoing price action and the merry-go round of headlines will continue as participants try to discount the latest news.

The European stock market was mixed. The pan-European STOXX 600 Index rose 0.1% for the day after closing at a record on Thursday. Futures for Nasdaq 500 and S&P 500 rose a little.

European markets have become more competitive.

Outperformed

Goldman Sachs has seen its stock price rise in recent months as a result of hopes for a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine and the possibility that interest rates will be cut and U.S. Tariffs may not be as severe as feared. Goldman Sachs

raised

Its 12-month price forecast of Europe's STOXX 600 cited the possibility that a ceasefire in Ukraine could occur.

The Hang Seng Tech Index, a measure of Chinese technology stocks, reached its highest level in the last three years Thursday, thanks to the success of a Chinese start-up, DeepSeek.

Hong Kong's benchmark stock index rose by over 2% on Friday, bringing its weekly gains up to 5%. This is the fifth consecutive week of gains, and its strongest performance weekly in four months.

James Ooi is a market strategist for Tiger Brokers. He said that the DeepSeek rally has more upside potential in the short-term, but the ability of the Chinese tech industry to monetise artificial intelligence will determine if the rally can be sustained.

Ooi stated that "while Chinese tech companies are valued lower, their dependence on domestic revenue limits the potential for them to achieve valuation levels comparable with global tech giants... They (also) face increased scrutiny over privacy and safety concerns."

Watch for Inflation

Data released on Thursday shows that U.S. producer price rose strongly in January. This reinforces the view of financial markets that the Federal Reserve will not cut interest rates until the second half.

The Fed's preferred measure of inflation, personal consumption expenditures (PCE), was soft. This led to the hope that the PCE reading would be lower than expected.

The consumer price index (CPI) for Wednesday showed the largest increase in almost 1-1/2 years.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes was unchanged at 4.5347%, after falling 10 basis points Thursday. This is its largest daily decline in a whole month.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback versus a basket currencies) was down by 0.2% for the day, at 106.93, after falling 0.8% on Friday, its largest one-day percentage decline since January 20.

The euro was hovering near its highest level in over two weeks, at $1.0477. This is due to optimism surrounding potential peace talks between Ukraine & Russia.

The oil price is rising, as it prepares to end three consecutive weeks of declines, boosted in part by increasing fuel demand.

Brent futures rose 0.5% to $75.37 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI), gained 0.4% at $71.45.

(source: Reuters)