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Stocks rebound amid investor anxiety about AI and tariffs

The global shares gained on Tuesday, after losing ground in the previous session. This was due to renewed attention on the economic impact artificial intelligence has on business and the markets' ongoing struggle with the repercussions of President Donald Trump’s tariff policies. Anthropic, a San Francisco-based startup, has announced 10 new ways for business customers to utilize its AI plugins. These include investment banking, engineering and human resources. This comes just weeks after previous releases caused a selloff of software and service stocks. The markets remained uncertain about Trump's tariffs after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that his emergency tariffs are illegal on Friday. U.S. Customs and Border Protection has imposed a 10% tariff on all goods that are not exempted, which is the rate Trump announced on Friday and not the 15% he promised the day after.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.81%. The S&P 500 rose 0.73%. And the Nasdaq Composite rose 1%.

Ken Mahoney is the president and chief executive of Mahoney Asset Management, a New Jersey-based asset management firm.

Mahoney stated that "we've already established we're going lose jobs with AI. AI may do things better and faster than some of the older software programs, but you then start to calculate that if companies are going let many?people go due to AI, that means that Microsoft will have to sell fewer licenses."

Mahoney stated, "We have gone through all of these areas and all the negativity. It's great to see that we are back to half where we were on Monday."

European stocks increased by 0.23%. The FTSE in Britain finished a little lower by 0.04%.

MSCI's All-World Index was up 0.52%, after falling 0.62%. International Business Machines shares plunged more than 13% – their largest one-day drop since late 2000 – after Anthropic announced that its Claude Code could be used to update a programming languages run on the company's system. IBM's stock recovered, and last rose 2.8%.

Many are concerned about the sheer size of corporate borrowings and expenditures on AI, especially given the market share of companies that are at the heart of this boom. Nvidia is the AI chip maker that will report earnings on Wednesday after the bell. It accounts for about 8% of?the entire S&P 500. Nvidia's stock was up 0.71%.

Margin is the biggest issue. "Margins, with the new technology that is cheaper, are something that really bothers markets," Mahoney stated.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes increased by 1 basis point to 4.03%. The yield on the 2-year note, which moves typically in line with expectations of interest rates for the Federal Reserve?rose 2.1 base points to 3.461%.

The yen fell in value after a report stating that the Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed her concerns about further rate increases to Governor Kazuo?of Japan Kazuo Ueda. The Japanese yen fell?0.69% to 155.74 dollars per yen against the dollar.

The dollar fell 0.18% against the Swiss Franc, at 0.773. The dollar was unchanged at $1.1781 per euro.

The pound rose 0.13%, to $1.3507. Brent crude fell 1% to $70.77 a barrel as tensions between the U.S.A. and Iran continued to simmer. Gold, the safe-haven asset, fell 1.51% to $5152 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)