European stocks rose on Wednesday for the first time in three sessions, with the STOXX 50 climbing 1% and the STOXX 600 up 0.9%, as a trade agreement between the US and Japan sparked hopes for further deals and reduced tariffs. President Trump said that Japan had agreed to a 15% tariff on its exports to the US, alongside a commitment to invest $550 billion into the US and open its markets to key American goods. The US President also said that representatives from the European Union were coming for trade negotiations today. Megacaps were mostly higher, including ASML Holding (1.4%), Nestle...
Wall Street's main indexes opened lower on Monday as tariff tensions kept investors on edge, while Tesla shares slid after CEO Elon Musk announced his plans to launch a political party. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 25.2 points, or 0.06%, at the open to 44,803.36. The S&P 500 fell 20.3 points, or 0.32%, at the open to 6,259.04, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 110.6 points, or 0.54%, to 20,490.55 at the opening bell. Source: Reuters
The Hang Seng fell 28 points or 0.12% to close at 23,888 on Monday, marking its third session of losses, weighed by falls in consumer and financial stocks. Cautious investors digested a fresh warning from U.S. President Trump that BRICS countries could face an additional 10% tariff. Traders also grew cautious ahead of China's June CPI and PPI data, due later this week, after four months of falling consumer prices in May and the steepest producer deflation in nearly two years. Losses were trimmed as China, one of the BRICS members, is unlikely to be hit by new levies due to a trade truce...
European stocks were little changed on Monday, with the STOXX 50 holding near 5,300 and the STOXX 600 flat at 541, as investors assessed new developments in US trade policy. President Trump is expected to send about a dozen formal tariff warning letters later today, although it was unclear whether EU countries would be included, while saying there would be an additional 10% levy on countries that side with the BRICS bloc. Meanwhile, Trade Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed that a broader package of tariffs, originally set for a July 9 launch, will now be delayed until August 1. Oil-related...
Japanese stocks fell in tense trading after U.S. President Donald Trump said tariff letters would begin to be sent out at noon Monday. Trump also said he would impose an additional 10% tariff on any country that aligns with the "anti-American BRICS policies." The Topix index fell 0.6% to 2,811.72 at the close in Tokyo. The Nikkei fell 0.6% to 39,587.68. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. was the biggest contributor to the Topix decline, down 2.3%. Exporters including electrical equipment and transportation equipment fell, while financials also fell amid economic uncertainty. Japan's...
The Hang Seng Index opened lower by 87 points or 0.36%, settling at 23,828 points; the H-share index fell by 32 points or 0.37%, reaching 8,576 points; while the technology index dropped by 23 points or 0.45%, closing at 5,192 points. Tech stocks exhibited a general softening trend, with Tencent down by 0.3%, Alibaba by 1%, Meituan by 1.1%, Xiaomi Group by 1%, and Kuaishou up by 0.9%. In the financial sector, stocks trended downwards, with HSBC Holdings showing no change; AIA Group declining by 0.7%; Ping An Insurance falling by 0.4%; and Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing dropping by...