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Dollar strengthens as US trade negotiations focus on US stock markets.

On Monday, major stock indexes declined while the dollar gained against the most important currencies as investors waited for the next trade announcements from the White House.

Treasury Bills with a longer expiration date

yields edged

higher.

United States

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced on Monday that he would make several announcements about trade in the next 48-hours. A deadline of Wednesday has been set to complete trade agreements.

The higher the rates,

scheduled

The new law will take effect on August 1, 2018.

"We are down (in the stocks) after the weekend and it is a crucial week for the tariffs," Peter Cardillo said, chief market analyst at Spartan Capital Securities, New York.

Investors are cautious because they don't know what will happen in the future with trade deals.

Tariffs

Prices are expected to rise and growth to slow, but uncertainty about the final policies could be more of a drag on businesses as they postpone making decisions.

S&P 500 companies will soon begin to report results for the second quarter.

In April, U.S. president Donald Trump announced a base tariff of 10% on most countries. The "reciprocal rates" could be as high as 50%.

He also warned that the levy could be as high as "60% or 70%" and threatened to add an additional 10% for countries who align themselves with "Anti-American Policies" of the BRICS Group of Brazil, Russia India and China.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 313.82 points or 0.70% to 44,508.71. The S&P 500 declined 40.14 points or 0.64% to 6,239.40. And the Nasdaq Composite lost 148.98 or 0.72% to 20,452.90.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 3.84 points (0.41%) to 921.89 while the pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 0.37%.

The yield on benchmark U.S. 10 year notes rose 3.1 basis points in the last day to 4.372%. The yield on interest-rate-sensitive two-year notes was unchanged for the day, at 3.882%.

The dollar index is a measure of the value of the dollar.

Measures to be taken

The currency rose by 0.34% against six major counterparts to 97.294, briefly reaching a week-high.

The euro fell 0.37% to $1.1735. The dollar gained 0.92% against the Japanese yen to reach 145.88.

The minutes of the Federal Reserve's last meeting are due this week. Investors are trying to determine how many times they expect the Fed to reduce interest rates in this year, after Thursday's jobs data showed that employers had added more jobs than forecast.

At a meeting scheduled for Tuesday, it is expected that the Reserve Bank of Australia will cut rates by a quarter-point to 3.60%. This would be the third rate cut in this cycle. The markets predict rates of either 2.85% or 3.10 percent.

U.S. crude oil rose 0.6%, to $67.40 per barrel. Brent was up 1% to $68.98 a barrel.

(source: Reuters)