Tuesday, April 29

Stocks have ticked sideways while the US dollar headed towards its largest monthly fall for years as investors braced for the trade war to be felt in earnings and economic data.

US President Donald Trump’s tariffs have rattled faith in US assets and even though numerous backdowns have helped the S&P 500 recover much of its early April losses, the dollar has managed only to steady, without a big rebound.

It slipped overnight when US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC it was “up to China to de-escalate” tariffs, which sit at 125 per cent for most US exports to China.

A holiday in Japan thinned currency trade in the Asia session, leaving most pairs steady. But at $1.1409 and up 5 per cent in April, the euro is set for its largest monthly rise on the dollar in almost 15 years, while the dollar’s 7 per cent drop on the safe-haven Swiss franc is the largest in a decade.

Nikkei and S&P 500 futures drifted higher, helped by officials foreshadowing a softening in automotive tariffs, though investors were holding out for more meaningful relief on the eye-watering 145 per cent US tariffs on China.

China has moved to make some exemptions but has held off on stimulus, betting Washington blinks first.

China’s foreign ministry also said President Xi Jinping had not spoken to Trump recently, nor were their respective administrations trying to strike a tariff deal, contradicting the US president’s claim in an interview with Time magazine.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was up 0.3 per cent in early trade and the mainland blue chip index fell 0.2 per cent.

First-quarter GDP and April US jobs figures due later in the week are likely to be supported by front-loaded purchases to beat out the new taxes, J.P. Morgan analysts said in a note, but a drop in China shipments suggests a reckoning may be due soon.

“The clock is ticking on hard data resilience,” said J.P. Morgan analysts in a note, which highlights a 42 per cent peak-to-trough slump in China shipments to the US in the past 10 days, which if sustained would reverberate through supply chains.

“A worrying decoupling of US-China trade … now looks to be underway, and we expect the damage to build in coming weeks and months.”

Besides US data, investors are watching for the outcome of Canada’s election – expected to return the Liberals to power – and inflation readings are due in Europe, beginning with Spain and Belgium later on Tuesday.

Power started returning to parts of the Iberian peninsula late on Monday after a huge outage brought most of Spain and Portugal to a standstill.

HSBC and big Chinese lenders report quarterly results on Tuesday, along with BP, Deutsche Bank, Adidas, Coca-Cola, General Motors and Visa.

Mega-caps Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta Platforms report later in the week.

The weaker dollar has set gold surging and it was at $3,333 an ounce on Tuesday, up nearly 7 per cent in April and nearly 27 per cent for the year so far. Brent crude was a touch weaker at $65.68 a barrel.

Treasuries were untraded in Asia owing to Japan’s holiday, leaving benchmark 10-year yields at 4.206 per cent and futures broadly steady.

https://thewest.com.au/business/markets/stocks-drift-dollar-slips-amid-us-china-stand-off-c-18521473

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