
European stocks closed sharply lower on Wednesday, with Tuesday's market recovery proving short-lived as U.S. country-specific tariffs kicked in. The pan-European Stoxx 600 ended the session down 3.5% at its lowest close since January 2024, with all sectors and major bourses in negative territory. Regional health care and oil and gas indexes were among the biggest losers, dropping 5.9% and 5%, respectively. Europe's main indexes extended losses after China announced it would impose retaliatory tariffs of 84% on U.S. imports from April 10, up from 34%, and the European Union agreed to a...
US stocks surged on Wednesday after President Donald Trump announced a 90-day halt to many of his new tariffs, sparking a huge market rally. The S&P 500 surged 9.5%, its biggest gain in five years, the Dow Jones jumped 2,960 points, or 7.9%, its biggest gain since 2020, while the Nasdaq jumped 12.1%, its biggest one-day jump since 2001. The move extends the momentum of the administration's shifting economic policies, and will temporarily halt tariffs on major U.S. suppliers that were initially aggressively taxed, such as Vietnam and Cambodia. However, Trump has escalated his trade war...
Hang Seng Index opened sharply higher on 10th April , climbing by 545 points to reach 20,810. The index later rose by 561 points, or 2.77%, settling at 20,825. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index advanced by 196 points, or 2.61%, to 7,732, while the Technology Index increased by 152 points, or 3.25%, to 4,841. The main board reported a trading volume of HK$46.2 billion. At 10.18am, the Hang Seng Index surged by over 800 points, rising by 868.04 points or 4.28%.Technology stocks led the rally, with Tencent rising 2.4%, Alibaba gaining 3.1%, Meituan up 2.1%, Xiaomi increasing by 4.1%, and...