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A day after the relief rally, US stocks and dollar are down on lingering concerns about tariffs.

Investors remained cautious on Thursday after President Donald Trump's decision to temporarily lower tariffs for many countries sparked a relief rally.

After this week's bond sale, the prices of U.S. Treasury bonds were not much different.

Investors are concerned about the uncertainty surrounding tariffs and the potential economic impact of the trade war.

Trump said on Wednesday that he will also raise the tariffs on Chinese imports. The White House confirmed a blanket 10% duty on nearly all U.S. imported goods. The White House said on Thursday that the U.S. tariffs against China have now reached 145% following the latest increase.

Art Hogan is the chief market strategist for B Riley Wealth, a New York-based firm.

Stocks fell despite U.S. consumer price data that showed unexpectedly lower prices in March.

Investors are also preparing for the beginning of U.S. quarterly earnings. Results from the largest U.S. financial institutions, including JPMorgan Chase, will be released on Friday.

Jake Dollarhide is the chief executive officer at Longbow Asset Management, a Tulsa-based asset management firm.

It may be that some of yesterday's rally is being retracted by the market because it realizes some of the relief was not as great they thought.

Since Trump's announcement late on April 2, the markets have been in turmoil.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 985.82, or 2.4%, to 39.623.35, while the S&P 500 declined 174.64, or 3.2%, to 5,282.26. And the Nasdaq Composite was down 678.26, or 3.9%, at 16,446.71.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 3.90 points or 0.50% to 781.38.

Trump's decision to reverse tariffs on the S&P 500 led to a global rally in stocks, with the S&P 500 soaring 9.5% on Wednesday.

The STOXX 600 index for Europe ended the day up 3.7%. China's CSI300 Blue-Chip Index rose by 1.3%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index grew by 2.1%.

Ursula von der Leyen, head of the European Commission, stated that the European Union would delay its retaliatory tariffs against American goods in response to Trump’s 90-day tariff suspension. This is because countries within the EU are scrambling to strike trade deals with Washington.

The dollar fell by 2.07% against the Japanese yen to 144.66. The euro rose 2.23%.

The U.S. Treasury price was little changed on Wednesday after a strong 10-year note sale and a pause in certain trade tariffs helped stabilize the market from a sharp sell-off of bonds earlier this week.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes was almost flat at 4,396%.

The price of oil fell. U.S. crude crude dropped $2.28 and settled at $60.07 per barrel, while Brent crude eased $2.15 and settled at $63.33.

(source: Reuters)