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Global equities rose on Monday on signs that consumer electronics imported into the US from China might escape the steepest of Donald Trump’s tariffs, as stock markets regained their footing after the turmoil created last week by the international trade war.
Wall Street’s S&P 500 index gained 1.7 per cent at the opening bell, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 jumped 2.2 per cent, after the White House late on Friday excluded smartphones and other consumer electronics from steep tariffs it introduced earlier this month, including the 125 per cent levied on China.
Technology stocks led the advance, with Apple’s share price jumping 7.5 per cent at the market open in the US, losing some of those gains to trade at 5.3 per cent higher by mid-morning in New York.
Trump and Howard Lutnick, US commerce secretary, on Sunday indicated that consumer electronics would instead be subject to a separate duty the White House was preparing for semiconductors.
It was unclear what level the chips tariffs would be set at, but other duties the Trump administration has imposed on individual sectors such as steel and aluminium suggest they could be substantially lower than the levies currently imposed on China.
Monday’s lift in US markets followed earlier gains in Europe and Asia. Europe’s benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 gained 2.5 per cent by afternoon trading in Europe, while the UK’s blue-chip FTSE 100 climbed 2 per cent. Dutch chipmakers Besi and ASML were up 4.5 per cent and 3.5 per cent respectively by the afternoon in Europe.
“Markets are taking whatever sign of relief they can,” said Mitul Kotecha, head of emerging markets macro strategy at Barclays.
In comments to journalists on Air Force One on Sunday, Trump said his administration would show “flexibility” for some products and signalled that it would be speaking to key companies to discuss the tariffs.
Asked what the semiconductor levy rate would be, he told reporters he would “be announcing it over the next week”.
Trump’s sweeping tariffs, announced at a “liberation day” event this month, unleashed turmoil across financial markets and sparked fears of a global recession. But stocks rallied at the end of the week, after Trump’s decision to put a 90-day pause on big “reciprocal” tariffs for most countries fed optimism that the worst-case trade scenario could be avoided.
The prospect of lower tariffs on popular consumer electronics would be a boost for Apple and other tech groups that rely heavily on Chinese factories to make iPhones and other goods.
“We might be past peak tariff fear,” said Michael Metcalfe, head of macro strategy at State Street Global Markets, adding that the new exemptions were a “reasonably significant backing off” on the level of tariffs expected at the end of last week.
The dollar, which has slid in recent weeks as investors sold US assets, stabilised, flat against a basket of its trading partners.
Analysts said markets were being caught between signs of capitulation on US tariffs and worries over the damage done to the global economy.
“Trump is clearly backtracking,” said Luca Paolini, chief strategist at Pictet Asset Management. “Markets smell he is desperate to find a way out of here, but the damage cannot be completely undone.”
Despite the market rebound, many investors remain cautious.
“Who knows what the next announcement will be,” said Max Kettner, chief multi-asset strategist at HSBC. “We’re not really buying today’s big rip — I’d much rather sell rips like today to sell a bit more on the equities side.”
The 10-year US Treasury yield, which soared last week as investors took fright over Trump’s escalating tariffs on China, fell 0.09 percentage points to 4.41 per cent as the price of the debt recovered.
Haven assets were steady. Gold touched a fresh record high of just over $3,245 per troy ounce on Monday morning, before giving up its gains.
Markets in Asia rebounded, led by Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index up 2.4 per cent, Japan’s Nikkei 225 rising 1.2 per cent and the broad Topix up 0.9 per cent.
China’s mainland CSI 300 rose 0.2 per cent as official data showed exports from the world’s second-largest economy leapt last month amid a rush to dispatch shipments before tariffs took effect.
Exports rose 12.4 per cent in US dollar terms in March on a year earlier, figures from China’s customs administration showed on Monday, well above expectations and the biggest rise since October.
Imports fell 4.3 per cent, a less steep contraction than the 8.4 per cent fall in the January-February period.
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