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Tuesday, April 29, 2025

World stock markets plunge again as Trump doubles down on tariffs

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22 days ago
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A person walks past an electronic stock board in Tokyo Monday, April 7, 2025. (Kyodo News via AP)

A person walks past an electronic stock board in Tokyo Monday, April 7, 2025. (Kyodo News via AP)

Uncredited

Glob­al stock mar­kets ex­tend­ed a se­vere plunge Mon­day, fu­eled by fears that U.S. tar­iffs would lead to a glob­al eco­nom­ic slow­down. Eu­ro­pean and Asian shares saw dra­mat­ic loss­es, the lead­ing U.S. in­dex flirt­ed with bear mar­ket ter­ri­to­ry in pre-mar­ket trad­ing, and oil prices sagged.

The mas­sive sell-off in riski­er as­sets at the start of the trad­ing week fol­lows Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s an­nounce­ment of sharply high­er U.S. im­port tax­es and re­tal­i­a­tion from Chi­na that saw mar­kets fall sharply Thurs­day and Fri­day.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 in­dex lost near­ly 8% short­ly af­ter the mar­ket opened and fu­tures trad­ing for the bench­mark was briefly sus­pend­ed. It closed down 7.8% at 31,136.58.

Eu­ro­pean shares fol­lowed Asian mar­kets low­er, led by Ger­many’s DAX in­dex, which briefly fell more than 10% at the open on the Frank­furt ex­change, but re­cov­ered some ground to move down 5.8% in morn­ing trad­ing. In Paris, the CAC 40 shed 5.8%, while Britain’s FTSE 100 lost 4.9% in the Eu­ro­pean morn­ing.

U.S. fu­tures sig­naled fur­ther weak­ness ahead. For the S&P 500, they lost 3.4%, while for the Dow Jones In­dus­tri­al Av­er­age, they shed 3.1%. Fu­tures for the Nas­daq lost 5.3%. If the pre-mar­ket fu­tures loss­es ma­te­ri­al­ize when the U.S. mar­ket opens, the S&P 500 will en­ter bear mar­ket ter­ri­to­ry — de­fined as a fall of more than 20% from the peak. The in­dex was off 17.4% as of the end of last week.

On Fri­day, the worst mar­ket cri­sis since the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic shift­ed in­to a high­er gear as the S&P 500 plum­met­ed 6% and the Dow plunged 5.5%. The Nas­daq com­pos­ite dropped 3.8%.

“There’s no sign yet that mar­kets are find­ing a bot­tom and be­gin­ning to sta­bi­lize,” wrote Deutsche Bank an­a­lysts in a re­search note.

Late Sun­day, Trump re­it­er­at­ed his re­solve on his de­ci­sion to in­tro­duce tar­iffs of 10% to 50% on goods im­port­ed in­to the U.S., a move seen as mas­sive­ly dis­rupt­ing world trade and sup­ply chains across bor­ders. Speak­ing to re­porters aboard Air Force One, he said he didn’t want glob­al mar­kets to fall, but al­so that he wasn’t con­cerned about the mas­sive sell-offs, adding, “some­times you have to take med­i­cine to fix some­thing.”

Heavy sell­ing kicked in af­ter Chi­na on Fri­day matched Trump’s tar­iff, up­ping the stakes in a trade war that many fear could end in a glob­al re­ces­sion. Even a bet­ter-than-ex­pect­ed re­port on the U.S. job mar­ket, usu­al­ly the eco­nom­ic high­light of each month, wasn’t enough to stop the slide.

“The idea that there’s so much un­cer­tain­ty go­ing for­ward about how these tar­iffs are go­ing to play out, that’s what’s re­al­ly dri­ving this plum­met in the stock prices,” said Rin­taro Nishimu­ra, an as­so­ciate at the Asia Group.

Chi­nese mar­kets of­ten don’t fol­low glob­al trends, but they al­so tum­bled. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 13.2% to 19,828.30, while the Shang­hai Com­pos­ite in­dex lost 7.3% to 3,096.58. In Tai­wan, the Taiex plum­met­ed 9.7%.

South Ko­rea’s Kospi lost 5.6% to 2,328.20, while Aus­tralia’s S&P/ASX 200 lost 4.2% to 7,343.30, re­cov­er­ing from a loss of more than 6%.

Asian economies are heav­i­ly ex­posed to Trump’s tar­iffs since they are de­pen­dent on ex­ports, and a large share go to the Unit­ed States.

“Be­yond the mar­ket melt­down, the big­ger con­cern is the im­pact and po­ten­tial crises for small and trade-de­pen­dent economies, so it’s cru­cial to see whether Trump will reach deals with most coun­tries soon, at least par­tial­ly,” said Gary Ng of Nataxis.

Oil prices al­so sank fur­ther, with U.S. bench­mark crude down $2.30 to $59.69 per bar­rel. Brent crude, the in­ter­na­tion­al stan­dard, gave up $2.33 to $63.25 a bar­rel. As with the larg­er sell-off, the drop was fu­eled by fears that the tar­iffs would slow eco­nom­ic growth. That would hit de­mand for fu­el, and the drop comes af­ter moves to in­crease pro­duc­tion by the OPEC+ pro­duc­ers’ al­liance.

Ex­change rates al­so gy­rat­ed. The U.S. dol­lar fell to 146.24 Japan­ese yen from 146.94 yen. The yen is of­ten viewed as a safe haven in times of tur­moil. The eu­ro rose 0.3% to $1.0992.

Nathan Thooft, chief in­vest­ment of­fi­cer and se­nior port­fo­lio man­ag­er at Man­ulife In­vest­ment Man­age­ment, said more coun­tries are like­ly to re­spond to the U.S. with re­tal­ia­to­ry tar­iffs. Giv­en the large num­ber of coun­tries in­volved, “it will take a con­sid­er­able amount of time in our view to work through the var­i­ous ne­go­ti­a­tions that are like­ly to hap­pen.”

“Ul­ti­mate­ly, our take is mar­ket un­cer­tain­ly and volatil­i­ty are like­ly to per­sist for some time,” he said.

The Fed­er­al Re­serve could cush­ion the blow of tar­iffs on the U.S. econ­o­my by cut­ting in­ter­est rates. That can en­cour­age com­pa­nies and house­holds to bor­row and spend. But Fed Chair Jerome Pow­ell said Fri­day that the high­er tar­iffs could dri­ve up ex­pec­ta­tions for in­fla­tion and low­er rates could fu­el still more price in­creas­es.

Much will de­pend on how long Trump’s tar­iffs stick and how oth­er coun­tries re­act. Some in­vestors are hold­ing on­to hope he will low­er the tar­iffs af­ter ne­go­ti­at­ing “wins” from oth­er coun­tries.

Stu­art Kaiser, head of U.S. eq­ui­ty strat­e­gy at Citi, wrote in a note to clients that earn­ings es­ti­mates and stock val­ues still don’t re­flect the full po­ten­tial im­pact of the trade war. “There is am­ple space to the down­side de­spite the large pull­back,” he said.

Kurten­bach re­port­ed from Bangkok. As­so­ci­at­ed Press writ­ers Aya­ka McGill, Paul Harloff and Jiang Jun­zhe con­tributed.

FRANK­FURT, Ger­many (AP) —

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