Zürcher Nachrichten - Equities savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war

EUR -
AED 4.290606
AFN 75.353131
ALL 95.69147
AMD 437.312615
ANG 2.091506
AOA 1071.336666
ARS 1601.3866
AUD 1.66074
AWG 2.10295
AZN 1.98787
BAM 1.953185
BBD 2.352051
BDT 143.617098
BGN 1.95518
BHD 0.440946
BIF 3473.035128
BMD 1.168306
BND 1.489499
BOB 8.069162
BRL 5.876692
BSD 1.167836
BTN 108.925694
BWP 15.741856
BYN 3.332624
BYR 22898.793058
BZD 2.348645
CAD 1.617677
CDF 2687.10322
CHF 0.924016
CLF 0.026674
CLP 1049.828245
CNY 7.977187
CNH 7.98277
COP 4261.231727
CRC 539.575259
CUC 1.168306
CUP 30.960103
CVE 110.117094
CZK 24.37666
DJF 207.950687
DKK 7.472612
DOP 70.215989
DZD 154.634622
EGP 62.087046
ERN 17.524587
ETB 183.245071
FJD 2.588851
FKP 0.868311
GBP 0.870616
GEL 3.142484
GGP 0.868311
GHS 12.874652
GIP 0.868311
GMD 85.870135
GNF 10247.236233
GTQ 8.934038
GYD 244.321835
HKD 9.149995
HNL 31.019468
HRK 7.532058
HTG 152.924596
HUF 366.917405
IDR 20074.998016
ILS 3.58025
IMP 0.868311
INR 109.038561
IQD 1529.851698
IRR 1537636.429519
ISK 143.210707
JEP 0.868311
JMD 184.353172
JOD 0.828343
JPY 186.720377
KES 151.295264
KGS 102.168535
KHR 4676.718378
KMF 490.688835
KPW 1051.474745
KRW 1740.711322
KWD 0.361077
KYD 0.973193
KZT 555.004535
LAK 25753.408827
LBP 104575.936875
LKR 368.515022
LRD 214.871391
LSL 19.301457
LTL 3.449703
LVL 0.706696
LYD 7.419035
MAD 10.848828
MDL 19.957194
MGA 4847.489005
MKD 61.568627
MMK 2453.79048
MNT 4174.794268
MOP 9.419648
MRU 46.600408
MUR 54.361744
MVR 18.061669
MWK 2024.98011
MXN 20.319197
MYR 4.643943
MZN 74.724681
NAD 19.301457
NGN 1588.218485
NIO 42.972465
NOK 11.099548
NPR 174.280911
NZD 2.007897
OMR 0.449217
PAB 1.167831
PEN 3.959499
PGK 5.132129
PHP 70.386879
PKR 325.726894
PLN 4.25424
PYG 7486.975771
QAR 4.2573
RON 5.091946
RSD 117.376158
RUB 88.996853
RWF 1710.202909
SAR 4.384394
SBD 9.414381
SCR 16.276991
SDG 702.151746
SEK 10.890187
SGD 1.491068
SHP 0.872258
SLE 28.769518
SLL 24498.788378
SOS 667.403564
SRD 43.751837
STD 24181.570603
STN 24.467241
SVC 10.218275
SYP 129.131123
SZL 19.287094
THB 37.731652
TJS 11.07073
TMT 4.094912
TND 3.407937
TOP 2.813
TRY 52.249847
TTD 7.930348
TWD 37.156211
TZS 3030.648273
UAH 50.734472
UGX 4362.159553
USD 1.168306
UYU 47.126902
UZS 14164.97405
VES 555.924051
VND 30776.678853
VUV 139.389829
WST 3.19472
XAF 655.077121
XAG 0.015749
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.157405
XCG 2.104673
XDR 0.815263
XOF 655.077121
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.063503
ZAR 19.382314
ZMK 10516.126215
ZMW 22.217159
ZWL 376.193981
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.63

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.35

    -2.31%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    80.17

    -0.51%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    98.26

    +1.15%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.3

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    90.29

    -0.03%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    204.03

    -0.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.81

    -0.07%

  • BP

    0.5400

    46.44

    +1.16%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    15.69

    -1.02%

Equities savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war
Equities savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war / Photo: Sam Yeh - AFP/File

Equities savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war

Asian markets collapsed Monday after China hammered the United States with its own hefty tariffs, ramping up a trade war that many fear could spark a recession.

Text size:

Trading floors were overcome by a wave of selling as investors fled to the hills on the worst day for equities since the pandemic, with Hong Kong shedding more than 10 percent, Tokyo diving eight percent and Taipei more than nine percent.

Futures for Wall Street's markets were also taking another hammering, while concerns about the impact on demand also saw commodities slump.

Donald Trump sparked a market meltdown last week when he unveiled sweeping tariffs against US trading partners for what he says was years of being ripped off and claiming that governments were lining up to cut deals with Washington.

But after Asian markets closed on Friday, China said it would impose retaliatory levies of 34 percent on all US goods from April 10.

It also imposed export controls on seven rare earth elements, including gadolinium -- commonly used in MRIs -- and yttrium, utilised in consumer electronics.

Hopes that the US president would rethink his policy in light of the turmoil were dashed Sunday when he said he would not make a deal with other countries unless trade deficits were solved.

He denied that he was intentionally engineering a selloff and insisted he could not foresee market reactions.

"Sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something," he said of the ructions that have wiped trillions of dollars off company valuations.

-- No sector spared --

The selling in Asia was across the board, with no sector unharmed by the savage selling -- tech firms, car makers, banks, casinos and energy firms all felt the pain as investors abandoned riskier assets.

Among the biggest losers, Chinese ecommerce titans Alibaba and JD.com tanked more than 11 percent, while Japanese tech investment giant SoftBank dived more than 10 percent.

Shanghai shed more than five percent and Singapore more than six percent, while Seoul gave up more than five percent triggering a so-called sidecar mechanism -- for the first time in eight months -- that briefly halted some trading.

Concerns about demand saw oil prices sink more than three percent Monday, having dropped around seven percent Friday. Both main contracts are now sitting at their lowest levels since 2021. Copper -- a vital component for energy storage, electric vehicles, solar panels and wind turbines -- also extended losses.

"The market is in free-fall mode again, punching through floors," said Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management. "Trump’s team isn't blinking. The tariffs are being treated as a victory lap, not a bargaining chip."

The losses followed another day of carnage on Wall Street on Friday, where all three main indexes fell almost six percent.

That came after Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell said US tariffs will likely cause inflation to rise and growth to slow and warned of an "elevated" risk of higher unemployment.

The measures by Trump are likely to give US central bankers a headache as they try to balance the need for interest rate cuts to support the economy with the need to keep a lid on prices.

His comments came after Trump had insisted "my policies will never change" and urged the Fed to cut rates.

"Powell's hands are tied," said Innes. "He’s acknowledged the obvious -- that tariffs are inflationary and recessionary -- but he's not signalling a rescue.

"And that's the problem. This time, the Fed's inflation mandate is forcing it to keep the safety net rolled up while asset prices get torched."

Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, said: "Traders are nervously watching the two biggest economies going toe to toe on tariffs and are fearing that both could receive knockout blows from a prolonged economic fight.

"Neither the US nor China are backing down when it comes to slapping new tariffs on each other and in this escalatory environment it's not surprising to see that risk assets are being avoided like the plague."

- Key figures around 0230 GMT -

Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 6.5 percent at 31,591.84

Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: DOWN 9.3 percent at 20,725.20

Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 6.1 percent at 3,138.32

West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 2.2 percent at $60.66 per barrel

Brent North Sea Crude: DOWN 2.2 percent at $64.14 per barrel

Dollar/yen: DOWN at 146.04 yen from 146.98 yen on Friday

Euro/dollar: UP at $1.0964 from $1.0962

Pound/dollar: UP at $1.2908 from $1.2893

Euro/pound: DOWN at 84.94 pence from 85.01 pence

New York - Dow: DOWN 5.5 percent at 38,314.86 (close)

London - FTSE 100: DOWN 5.0 percent at 8,054.98 (close)

W.Vogt--NZN