Published
6 years agoon
By
AP NewsStocks marched broadly higher on Wall Street in midday trading Monday after President Donald Trump claimed China was willing to reopen talks on the costly trade war that has roiled markets and dimmed the outlook for global economic growth.
The S&P 500 was up 0.8% as of 12:05 p.m. Eastern Time. The Dow gained 210 points, or 0.8%, to 25,845. The Nasdaq rose 0.9%.
Major indexes in Germany and France rose. Markets in Britain were closed for a national holiday. In Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng and Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 closed lower.
Bond prices were little changed. The yield on the 10-year Treasury held steady at 1.52%. Oil prices edged lower.
Energy services company TechnipFMC led the gainers in the S&P 500, climbing 5.2%. Gap fell the most, sliding 2.8%.
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Stock markets have been volatile this summer as traders have been whipsawed by the turns in the trade war between the world’s biggest economies.
The conflict escalated once again on Friday, after China announced new tariffs on $75 billion in U.S. goods. Trump responded angrily on Twitter, at one point saying he “hereby ordered” U.S. companies with operations in China to consider moving them to other countries, including the U.S.
Trump also later announced that the U.S. would increase existing tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese goods to 30% from 25%, and that new tariffs on another $300 billion of imports would be 15% instead of 10%.
Stephen Innes, managing partner at Valour Markets in Singapore, compared the difficulty of assessing the volatile market situation to reading tea leaves.
“Nobody understands where the president is coming from,” he said, adding that the best thing Trump can do for market stability is to “keep quiet.”
The market is now dominated by fears of a portending U.S. recession, although the American economy is actually holding up, and much of the U.S. economy is made up of consumption, Innes said. If interest rates come down, he added, consumer spending is likely to go up, working as a buffer for the economy.
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Published
6 years agoon
By
AP NewsStocks marched broadly higher on Wall Street in midday trading Monday after President Donald Trump claimed China was willing to reopen talks on the costly trade war that has roiled markets and dimmed the outlook for global economic growth.
The S&P 500 was up 0.8% as of 12:05 p.m. Eastern Time. The Dow gained 210 points, or 0.8%, to 25,845. The Nasdaq rose 0.9%.
Major indexes in Germany and France rose. Markets in Britain were closed for a national holiday. In Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng and Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 closed lower.
Bond prices were little changed. The yield on the 10-year Treasury held steady at 1.52%. Oil prices edged lower.
Energy services company TechnipFMC led the gainers in the S&P 500, climbing 5.2%. Gap fell the most, sliding 2.8%.
[rlic_related_post_one]
Stock markets have been volatile this summer as traders have been whipsawed by the turns in the trade war between the world’s biggest economies.
The conflict escalated once again on Friday, after China announced new tariffs on $75 billion in U.S. goods. Trump responded angrily on Twitter, at one point saying he “hereby ordered” U.S. companies with operations in China to consider moving them to other countries, including the U.S.
Trump also later announced that the U.S. would increase existing tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese goods to 30% from 25%, and that new tariffs on another $300 billion of imports would be 15% instead of 10%.
Stephen Innes, managing partner at Valour Markets in Singapore, compared the difficulty of assessing the volatile market situation to reading tea leaves.
“Nobody understands where the president is coming from,” he said, adding that the best thing Trump can do for market stability is to “keep quiet.”
The market is now dominated by fears of a portending U.S. recession, although the American economy is actually holding up, and much of the U.S. economy is made up of consumption, Innes said. If interest rates come down, he added, consumer spending is likely to go up, working as a buffer for the economy.
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Trump Pardons Ex-Strategist Steve Bannon, Dozens of Others
Long Shot? Capitol Rioters Hold Out Hope for a Trump Pardon
‘Shameful’: US Virus Deaths Top 400k as Trump Leaves Office
Federal Court Strikes Down Major Trump Climate Rollback
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