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Stocks rise, dollar falls; China retaliates against Trump tariffs

The U.S. Dollar eased, and the gold price hit a new record high as China raised its tariffs against U.S. Imports. A brutal week in market swings came to an end.

Investors remain nervous about further bond liquidations, and the U.S. Bond sell-off has resumed. Prices for 10-year Treasury bonds have eased while yields (which move in the opposite direction to prices) are on track for their largest weekly increase in over 43 years.

Investors digested reports showing that U.S. consumers' sentiment declined sharply in April, and another report showing unexpectedly lower U.S. producer prices in March.

The results of some major Wall Street banks were also examined, as they kicked off U.S. quarterly reporting. JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley were among those who released reports. The majority of the major U.S. banking institutions beat their forecasts in the first quarter.

Since U.S. president Donald Trump announced the sweeping tariffs on April 2, markets have been shaken by fears of recession and the global trade conflict.

China retaliated on Friday by increasing its tariffs against U.S. products to 125% from 84%.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 67.71, or 0.14 percent, to 39.647.37. The S&P 500 rose by 14.71, or 0.28 percent, to 5,282.76. And the Nasdaq Composite gained 75.17, or 0.44 percent, to 16.458.73.

The S&P 500 sectors that saw the most growth were technology-related.

Thomas Martin, Senior Portfolio Manager at Globalt Investments said: "A lot has been de-risked in the (technical) space. Investors don't want too much risk in being underweighted in these areas."

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 1.56 points or 0.20% to 777.71. The pan-European STOXX 600 fell by 0.13%.

Analysts said that hedge funds and asset managers sold bonds in the Treasury market this week, after they received margin calls and suffered sharp losses due to market volatility.

The strong auctions of 30-year and 10-year debt held on Wednesday and Thursday stabilized the market, but investors are still hesitant to buy bonds until liquidity improves.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes increased by 14.3 basis points, to 4.535%.

The yields on euro zone bonds had eased earlier, and the premium demanded by holders of Treasuries to hold U.S. bond rather than German bunds, rose the most since the 1990s.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket of currencies, including the yen, the euro and others) fell by 0.41%, while the euro rose by 1.07%, reaching $1.1317.

The dollar fell 0.61% against the Japanese yen to 143.61.

The dollar fell by 0.87% against the Swiss Franc to 0.816.

Gold spot was up 1.8% to $3,230.75 per ounce after reaching a session high of $3237.56. Bullion has risen over 6% in the last week.

(source: Reuters)