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Stocks rally in relief after Trump suspends tariffs

On Thursday, global stocks rose, the dollar regained its footing and the manic bond saleoff stabilized after U.S. president Donald Trump announced he would temporarily reduce the heavy duties he had imposed on dozens countries.

After a market crash that wiped trillions from global stocks, and pushed down U.S. Treasury Bonds and the dollar in an unexpected reversal, Trump announced on Wednesday a 90-day suspension of many of his new duties.

Overnight, Wall Street's "Magnificent 7" stocks gained more than $1.5 trillion. The S&P 500 Index and Nasdaq Composite Index also recorded their largest percentage gains for more than a decade.

The U.S. Futures market turned lower Thursday with Nasdaq Futures dropping 0.67%, and S&P500 futures declining 0.17%.

In the previous session the dollar recorded its biggest one-day gain against the Swiss Franc and the yen since two months, and it held most of these gains in Asia on Friday.

The Nikkei soared by 8% in Japan, while European futures jumped.

The EuroStoxx 50 and DAX Futures each climbed by roughly 9%. FTSE futures jumped 6%.

Jeff Schulze is the head of ClearBridge Investments' economic and market strategy. He said that the news surprised the market because of its magnitude.

"However, given that the tariffs have been announced and are still in place... this is still going dramatically increase the average effective rate of tariff in the U.S. up to close to 20 percent."

Trump's decision to reverse the tariffs on specific countries is not final. The White House announced that a 10% blanket duty will continue to be applied to almost all U.S. imported goods. This announcement does not seem to affect existing duties on steel, aluminium and autos.

He said he would also increase the tariffs on Chinese imports from 104% to 125%, which came into effect Wednesday.

China raised the additional duties on American goods to 84% on Wednesday and imposed restrictions against 18 U.S. firms, mostly in defense-related industries.

It is hard to imagine either side reversing their position in the coming days. We believe that there will be talks, but a complete rollback of the tariffs added since Inauguration day is unlikely.

Our long-held assumption that the effective rate of tariffs on China will settle at around 60% seems to be the best bet.

The offshore yuan is expected to open Chinese markets ahead of the onshore opening. The dollar was last 0.15% lower at 7.3570 per dollar after hitting a record low earlier this week.

SELL BONDS

The steep drop in bond prices this week showed signs of slowing down on Thursday.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury rate was last at 4,3160%. It had reached a high of 4.515% in the previous session, and risen by 13 basis points.

Fears of fragility on the world's largest bond market were reignited by a violent U.S. Treasury sale in previous sessions. The "dash for money" of the COVID era was reminiscent.

Lawrence Gillum is the chief fixed income analyst at LPL Financial. He said that Treasury yields are continuing to rise because of "sticky inflation, a patient Federal Reserve, potential foreign buyer boycotts and hedge fund deleveraging."

The minutes of the Fed's March meeting were released on Wednesday. They showed that policymakers are not going to rush to cut interest rates because they believe higher tariffs will boost inflation. However, they also worry about Trump's trade policies affecting economic growth.

The markets are now pricing just 80 basis points in rate reductions by December. This is down from over 100 bps earlier this week.

Oil prices in other countries rose due to optimism about the tariff pause.

Spot gold continued to climb, and it was up by 0.5% last at $3.097.52 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)