Market

GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks Surge in Relief Rally After Trump Pauses Tariffs

April 10, 2025, 08.08 AM | Source: Reuters
GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks Surge in Relief Rally After Trump Pauses Tariffs

ILUSTRASI. Stocks rally sharply, European futures jump with bond market rout shows signs of stabilising


GLOBAL MARKET - SINGAPORE. Global stocks rallied, the dollar found footing and a manic bond selloff stabilised on Thursday after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would temporarily lower the hefty duties he had just imposed on dozens of countries.

Following a days-long market rout that erased trillions of dollars from global stocks and pressured U.S. Treasury bonds and the dollar, Trump on Wednesday announced a 90-day pause on many of his new tariffs in a shock reversal.

The move sent Wall Street's "Magnificent Seven" stocks tacking on more than $1.5 trillion in market value overnight and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index clocked their biggest daily percentage gains in more than a decade.

But U.S. futures turned lower on Thursday, with Nasdaq futures falling 0.67% and S&P 500 futures down 0.17%.

The dollar logged its largest one-day jump against the yen in two months and in five against the Swiss franc in the previous session, and held to most of those gains in Asia on Thursday.

Read Also: US Stocks Surge, Dollar Gains in Dramatic Relief Rally as Trump Pauses Tariffs

Japan's Nikkei surged 8%, while European futures shot up.

EUROSTOXX 50 futures and DAX futures climbed roughly 9% each. FTSE futures jumped 6%.

"This is a piece of news that surprised market participants, given the magnitude of the move ... Obviously this is a pretty strong risk-on environment we're seeing in the aftermath of the announcement," said Jeff Schulze, head of economic and market strategy at ClearBridge Investments.

"However, given the tariffs that have been announced and that are staying in place ... that is still going to dramatically increase the average effective tariff rate in the U.S. to close to 20%."

Trump's reversal on the country-specific tariffs is not absolute. A 10% blanket duty on almost all U.S. imports will remain in effect, the White House said. The announcement also does not appear to affect duties on autos, steel and aluminium that are already in place.

He also heaped pressure on China, saying he would raise the tariff on Chinese imports to 125% from the 104% level that came into effect on Wednesday.

China on Wednesday raised additional duties on American products to 84% and imposed restrictions on 18 U.S. companies, mostly in defence-related industries.

"It is difficult to see either side backing down in the next few days. But we suspect that talks will eventually happen, although a full rollback of all the additional tariffs applied since Inauguration Day appear unlikely," said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics.

Read Also: Indonesians Rush to Gold as Rupiah and Stocks Plunge Amid US Tariff Worries

"Our long-standing assumption that the effective tariff rate on China would settle around 60% still seems like the best bet."

Ahead of the onshore open of Chinese markets, the offshore yuan was last 0.15% weaker at 7.3570 per dollar, having struck a record low earlier in the week.

BONDS SELLOFF

A steep selloff in bonds this week also showed some signs of easing on Thursday.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield was last at 4.3160%, having touched a high of 4.5150% in the previous session and rising some 13 basis points.

A violent U.S. Treasury selloff in the previous sessions, evoking the COVID-era "dash for cash", had reignited fears of fragility in the world's biggest bond market.

"Sticky inflation, a patient (Federal Reserve), potential foreign buyer boycotts, hedge fund deleveraging, rebalancing out of bonds into cash, and an illiquid Treasury market are all reasons why Treasury yields continue to move higher," said Lawrence Gillum, chief fixed income strategist at LPL Financial.

Read Also: Stocks Slide in Asia as Recession Fears Pummel Sentiment, Oil Hits 4 Year Lows

Fed policymakers signalled they will not be quick to ride to the rescue with interest rate cuts because they expect higher tariffs to boost inflation, even as they worry Trump's trade policy could deal a blow to economic growth, minutes of the central bank's mid-March meeting out on Wednesday showed.

Markets are now pricing in just about 80 basis points of rate cuts by December, down from more than 100 bps earlier in the week.

Elsewhere, oil prices rose on optimism over the pause on tariffs.

Spot gold extended its climb and was last up 0.5% at $3,097.52 an ounce.

Next: US Stocks Surge, Dollar Gains in Dramatic Relief Rally as Trump Pauses Tariffs

Editor: Anna Suci Perwitasari
Latest News