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US stocks almost flat amid trade tensions; euro hits 4-year high

US stocks almost flat amid trade tensions; euro hits 4-year high

The U.S. stock market was little changed on Wednesday, as the trade war between America and its trading partners intensified investor anxiety. Meanwhile, the euro reached its highest level in four months against U.S. dollars.

Trade tensions weighed on oil prices, which fell by a sharp amount, and are now set to lose a third consecutive day. This is due to the fact that U.S. crude stocks grew more than expected.

Howard Lutnick, the U.S. Commerce Department's chief, told Bloomberg in an interview that President Donald Trump may consider protecting certain sectors from tariffs. His administration will announce tariffs on Canada and Mexico later on Wednesday.

The U.S. tariffs against imports from Canada and Mexico, as well as China, went into effect Tuesday. Trump delivered his State of the Union Address, where he lauded his achievements since assuming office six weeks earlier.

Canada and China immediately retaliated, while Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum suggested that her country might look for new trade partners.

Rick Meckler of Cherry Lane Investments in New Vernon New Jersey said that stocks are volatile due to the uncertainty surrounding tariffs.

He said that a trade war which escalates is a bad thing.

Investors also digested the ISM survey which revealed that the U.S. service sector activity was in expansion territory with 53.5, higher then expectations of 52.6.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 123.66, or 0.29, points to 42,648.78. The S&P 500 gained 3.20, or 0.06, points to 5,781.35, and the Nasdaq Composite increased by 25.61, or 0.14, points to 18,310.77.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 6.52 points or 0.77% to 852.66. The pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 0.91%. Defense stocks in the region have soared this month on the prospect of an increase in European security spending.

The euro rose 1.32% to $1.0764 and is on course for its biggest weekly gain since November 20,22. The euro got a boost on Tuesday night when the German political parties agreed on a 500-billion-euro ($534.75-billion) infrastructure fund, and crucially a change in borrowing limits, which economists called "a really large bazooka".

The German government's overhaul of its borrowing led to the largest sell-offs in debts since the 1990s.

Investors weighed the uncertainty around Trump's tariffs while assessing the economic data.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. note rose by 2.5 basis points, to 4.235% from 4.21% at Tuesday's close.

Investors were also watching the National People's Congress's first annual session, where Beijing reaffirmed its goal of a 5% growth in the economy by 2025.

The dollar fell 0.20%, to 7.237, against the offshore Chinese Yuan.

U.S. crude oil fell by 4.39%, to $65.27 per barrel. Brent fell 3.76% to $68.37 a barrel. (Additional reporting from Amanda Cooper in London, and Kevin Buckland, in Tokyo. Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Clarence Fernandez; Jan Harvey, Christina Fincher, and Richard Chang.)

(source: Reuters)