
European stock markets have opened sharply lower, with the Stoxx 600 index falling 0.42% and almost all sectors in the red led by travel, down 1.5%. Global sentiment has not been improved by the latest updates on U.S. tariffs, with high duties that Washington has imposed on China expected to remain in force and with negotiations with key U.S. trading partners looking set to rumble on beyond the initial July 9 deadline. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 initially dipped after closing at a record high on Wednesday, but was last fractionally above the flatline after figures showed the British economy...
The Hang Seng plunged 331 points, or 1.4%, to close at 24,035 on Thursday, reversing gains from the previous session amid a plunge in U.S. futures following President Trump's threat of new tariffs. This came just a day after China and the U.S. struck a positive tone in talks to ease tensions. Trump said letters detailing the terms of a new trade deal would be sent to countries within weeks, which they could either accept or reject. The market retreated from a nearly three-month high, with all sectors down as traders locked in profits. Sentiment also turned cautious ahead of U.S. PPI data...
Stocks slid Thursday as U.S. President Donald Trump threatened setting unilateral tariffs on trading partners in two weeks. The S&P 500 lost 0.1%, while the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.1%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was also lower by 191 points, or 0.5%. Dow component Boeing shed 4% after an Air India Dreamliner 787 crashed after takeoff with 242 passengers on board. Shares of Oracle surged 11% after the company reported fiscal fourth-quarter results that beat on the top and bottom lines and indicated more cloud growth ahead. Stocks were weaker even as investors got...