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As trade war continues to roil markets, stocks and the dollar are once again battered.

Global stocks dropped on Friday, and the dollar fell after a week that was marked by a trade war escalating to a full-blown conflict and a selloff in the bond market which has sparked fears of a recession and shaken the confidence of U.S. assets.

Investors sought out other safe assets. The euro rose 1.7% to $1.13855 - a level not seen since February 2022 - and gold, which is seen as a secure asset in times of crisis, reached another record high.

Investors are worried about the Sino-U.S. Trade War after U.S. president Donald Trump raised tariffs on Chinese Imports to 145%.

China has responded by increasing its tariffs against the U.S. for each Trump increase. This has raised fears that Beijing could raise duties beyond the current 84%.

LSEG data show that the selloff of U.S. Treasuries accelerated during Asian hours. The 10-year note yield rose to 4.45% this week, a gain of about 45 basis points, which is the largest increase since 2001.

There's a clear exodus of U.S. assets. Kyle Rodda is a senior financial market analyst at Capital.com. He said that a falling currency and bond markets are never a positive sign. This goes beyond a slowdown in growth and trade uncertainty.

In Europe, the STOXX 600 fell nearly 1% in the morning and is expected to drop 1.7% this week. This will be one of the most volatile weeks on record.

In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei fell 4.3% for the day while stocks in South Korea dropped nearly 1%.

Scott Bessent, U.S. Treasury secretary, tried to reassure skeptics at a cabinet meeting held on Thursday by telling them that over 75 countries were interested in starting trade negotiations. Trump expressed his own hope for a deal to be reached with China, which is the world's second largest economy.

James Athey said that the outlook is still clouded by more uncertainty today than it was a month earlier. There are so many questions that remain unanswered.

U.S. Futures for the S&P 500 & Nasdaq were mostly unchanged on the day. However, trading was highly erratic. Both had traded as low as 2% before rallying up to 1.6%.

After Trump's decision to temporarily lower tariffs for many countries on Wednesday, the anxiety over tariffs has caused a new rush into safe havens.

The short-term outlook of global risk assets is uncertain due to growth and inflation concerns. Fluid sentiments, and rapid changes in trade and tariff developments are also factors. Vasu Menon said.

Fears of a recession

The violent U.S. Treasury sale this week, which evoked the COVID era "rush for cash", has reignited concerns about the fragility of the world's largest bond market.

LSEG data revealed that the 30-year bond yields increased to 4.90% and are on track for their largest weekly increase since at least 1982.

Michael Krautzberger Global CIO Fixed income at Allianz Global Investors said that the current situation in U.S. bonds markets does not reflect inflation concerns.

Krautzberger said that the price movement in Treasuries may be reflecting investor concerns about a recession or sharp slowdown of growth, which "would make an unsustainable U.S. Fiscal Outlook even worse."

"On the contrary, we may be seeing a rebalancing of institutional investors or deleveraging in leveraged funds."

Gold, the most valuable commodity, rose 1.1% to $3.210 per ounce.

The oil prices rose again on Friday but are still heading for their second consecutive week of declines due to concerns over a protracted trade war between China and the United States. Brent crude futures rose 1% to $63,97 per barrel.

(source: Reuters)