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US stocks rise in choppy trading as oil prices fall

Wall Street indexes rose in choppy trade on Friday after briefly falling following a tense White House meeting between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

The White House meeting, the tariffs and Iraq’s decision to resume Kurdistan exports fueled fears that led to a drop in oil prices.

The European stock market ended the week flat, but it still managed to post a weekly gain.

A heated argument broke out in front of the camera between U.S. president Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych over a potential cease-fire in the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

Adam Sarhan is the chief executive officer of 50 Park Investments, based in New York. He said that initially, the market fell because of a heated, contentious discussion, which was not a good thing for two world leaders.

The market fell because of this, but cooler heads then prevailed.

The S&P 500 rose 1.59% and ended the session at 5,954.50. The Nasdaq rose by 1.63%, to 18,847.28. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 1.39%, to 43,840.91.

The volume on the U.S. exchanges remained high, with 17.5 Billion shares traded, as compared to an average of 15,4 Billion shares during the 20 previous sessions.

The Eurostoxx50 futures and Dax futures both fell by up to 1.4%.

U.S. Treasury Yields dropped to new multi-month highs after a closely monitored report by the Federal Reserve revealed that annual inflation had subsided and that consumer spending slowed down last month.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 5.69 points or 0.66%.

The crypto prices fell as the Trump-fueled boom fizzled.

Ukraine's dollar bond prices fell on Friday, but the market reacted tamely to chaos at the meeting by holding onto their previous levels. The 2034 maturity dropped just one cent, with the last bid being 59.04 cents per dollar. This is set to be a monthly gain.

Investors have changed their minds about the Trump administration's policy towards Russia and the impact it will have on Ukraine's economy.

The STOXX 600 pan-European index had ended the previous day flat.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback versus six major counterparts) rose by 0.21% to reach 107.59.

The euro dropped by up to 0.37%, reaching a low of $1.036 in two weeks. It then recovered some of this decline and traded at $1.0366.

Emerging Market Stocks fell by 28.01 points or 2.49%.

US DATA, TARIFF RISKS

U.S. data show that the 12-month change of the U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index fell to 2.5% from 2.6% last month.

The Fed's preferred inflation measure, core PCE, dropped to 2.6%, from a revised upwards 2.9%. The central bank targets a 2% inflation rate.

Both measures were in line with expectations of economists.

The threat of rising tariffs has helped boost the dollar but also raised concerns about the economic impact of widespread duties in the U.S.

Peter Cardillo is the chief market economist of Spartan Capital Securities. He said that "the report indicates that inflation stays sticky."

The pause will continue. The Fed could be in a bind because recent macro figures are showing signs of an economy that is cooling.

The prospect of increased U.S. Tariffs sent markets into a frenzy and revived fears about an escalating trade war.

Trump announced on Thursday that 25% of the duties on imports coming from Canada and Mexico would be in effect from March 4, not April 2, as he suggested earlier. He also said that goods imported from China will face an additional 10% duty. He also proposed 25% tariffs for shipments coming from the European Union this week.

Bitcoin dropped 0.18% to $84,138.56

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes dropped 6 basis points from 4,287% to 4.227% on Thursday.

The yield on the 2-year bond, which is usually in line with expectations of interest rates for the Federal Reserve (Federal Reserve), fell by 8.9 basis points, to 3.991% from 4.08% at Thursday's end.

Spot gold dropped 0.68%, to $2.856.49 per ounce.

U.S. Gold Futures closed 1.6% lower, at $2.848.50.

Brent crude futures settled at $73.18 per barrel on Friday. This is a decline of 1.16%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude Futures ended at $69.76 per barrel, down 0.84%.

The broadest MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan fell 2.45% to 576.86 while the Nikkei, Japan's stock market, dropped 1,100.67 or 2.88% points to 37,155.50.

(source: Reuters)