
The Hang Seng plunged 3,021 points or 13.2% on Monday, marking its steepest one-day loss since 2008, to end below the 20,000 mark at 19,828. It was the second session of heavy selling, dragging the index to an over two-month low as most sectors, particularly tech, consumer, and financials, posted double-digit losses. The plunge followed escalating trade tensions, with the White House standing firm on tariff plans and China announcing retaliatory levies on U.S. goods. President Trump said markets would have to "take their medicine," saying no deal would be made until the U.S. trade gap was...
U.S. stocks plunged for a third straight session on Monday, as the White House doubled down on aggressive tariffs against key trading partners despite growing market turmoil. The S&P 500 sank 3.7%, pushing its decline from its February record high to 20%, officially entering bear market territory. The Dow Jones dropped another 1,200 points, or 3.3%, while the Nasdaq fell 3.7%, having already entered a bear market last week amid mounting recession fears sparked by President Trump's sweeping trade policies. On Friday, China announced a 34% tariff on all U.S. imports instead of returning...
European stocks plunged to the lowest in more than a year on Monday, as President Donald Trump issued a fresh tariff threat to China and foreign leaders raced to the negotiating table to persuade him to lower his steep tariff charges. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index was 4.5% lower at the close in London, the lowest since end-January 2024, having earlier shed as much as 6.5%. The DAX slid 4.2%, recouping some of its earlier 10% plunge. Shortly before the closing bell in Europe, Trump threatened to impose an additional 50% tariff on China unless...