After a frenzied opening 45 minutes, the London stock market remains deep, deep in the red, although it’s a little higher than during its panicky opening plunge. The FTSE 100 index is currently down 370 points at 7685 points, which wipes 4.5% off the value of the largest listed companies in the City, Every stock on the FTSE 100 is down today. Here are the top fallers (it’s a fast-changing list, though!) Engineering firm Melrose: – 8.7% Engineering firm Babcock: – 8.3% Asset manager Polar Capital: -8.5% Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust: – 8.1% Bank Barclays: -8% Copper miner Antofagasta: -7.8% Asset manager Pershing Square: -7.6% Asset manager St James’s Place: -7.3% Retailer JD Sports: -7.3% Enginereering firm Rolls-Royce: – 6.9% The market mayhem is a sign that investors are questioning the competence of the Trump White House, explains Paul Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management: Over the weekend, US administration officials gave contradictory statements on trade taxes, causing investors to question the existence of a masterplan. Attempts to justify attacks on the Heard Island penguins only emphasized the peculiarity of the tariff formula. US President Trump took time from their golf weekend to twice post that equity declines were “on purpose”. Investors had assumed Trump’s trade taxes were a bargaining tool, as during the first term. That depends on competent policymaking to balance the benefits of trade negotiations against the damage of tariffs. If the competence of policymaking is questioned, markets will worry that economic damage will be lasting. Stocks across Europe have cratered to their lowest level since December 2023. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index, which tracks the six hundred largest companies in Europe, has slumped by over 6% this morning, to its lowest level since early December 2023. Richard Hunter, head of markets at interactive investor, says: “China is clearly in the mood for the fight, and with the world’s two largest economies at loggerheads, the result has been ugly for investors. Retaliatory tariffs announced on Friday by China sent markets into another tailspin, while comments from President Trump over the weekend will do little to assuage the situation, with US futures already pointing to another difficult trading session to come. The futures market indicates the US S&P 500 will slump by another 3.5% when trading begins later today, with the tech-focused Nasdaq index on track for a 4.5% tumble. Across Europe, stock markets are in freefall. In Frankfurt, Germany’s DAX index has fallen by 10% at the start of trading, while France’s CAC has lost 6.6%, and the Italian FTSE MIB is down 5.7%. In percentage and points terms, this morning’s 6% plunge would be the worst day for the FTSE 100 since March 2020, when markets crashed early in the Covid-19 pandemic. Britain’s stock market has plunged deep into the red at the start of trading. Stocks are sliding sharply again, adding to last week’s heavy losses, as investors grow more fearful that Donald Trump’s trade policies will lead to recession. In London, the FTSE 100 index of blue-chip stocks has plunged by 488 points, or 6%, taking the index down to 7566 points, its lowest level since February 2024. That’s an even more severe plunge than the near-5% wipeout on Friday after China retaliated against the US with its own new tariffs. Every share on the FTSE 100 is in the red, with UK manufacturing firm Rolls-Royce tumbling by 13%. Miners, banks, and investment firms are also in the top fallers. There is widespread disappointment this morning that there was no progress on US trade tariffs over the weekend, with Trump described his new tariffs as necessary ‘medicine’. Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, says investors are desperate to see ‘concrete action’, such as a pause or u-turn on Trump’s tariffs. This market is looking for concrete action, not talk of action. The best panacea for financial markets right now would be a pause or reversal from the US on its tariff programme. Australia’s stock market has recorded its worst session since the Covid-19 pandemic rattled markets five years ago. The S&P/ASX 200 index has closed down 4.2%, and is now almost 15% off its all-time high set in February. “Rarely if ever have the next few days been so important,” Deutsche Bank warned clients this morning. In a new research note, Deutsche point out that the shock since “Liberation Day” last Wednesday has led to the fourth worst two-day market slump since the second world war – with only the 1987 crash, the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 and the initial Covid panic seeing worse back-to-back days. Deutsche warn that the disruption is the biggest since Richard Nixon took America off the gold standard in 1971: It represents the biggest shock to the global trading system since the Bretton Woods collapse in 1971 and will represent the largest tax increase for the US consumer since the 1968 Revenue and Expenditure Control Act that came during the Vietnam War. It’s hard to say we weren’t warned though. Trump has been pretty clear as to his views on tariffs for years, if not decades, and his actions and words pre and post inauguration have been quite clear, as have those of his Administration. However the scale of the “Liberation Day” tariffs exceeded expectations, and the arbitrary way they were calibrated was a major shock and creates a significant credibility issue which is just as unsettling to global markets as the action itself. Deutsche add that it is important to watch whether the US Administration tries to find “an elegant off-ramp or doubles down” on its trade policy, Deutsche add: This is crucial as it will dictate more things than just trade. It will impact the whole relationship between the US and the RoW [rest of the world] in everything that is important, including defence, geopolitics and the multi-lateral rules-based world order. So where trade goes from here will influence everything else. A US Administration that doubles down will have immense global implications for 2025 and the years and decades ahead. At the moment there are few signs they are backing down which will likely signal more market turmoil ahead. Rarely if ever have the next few days been so important. Overnight, billionaire investor Bill Ackman urged Donald Trump to pause his new global tariffs, warning. Ackman, who supported Trump during last year’s presidential race, posted on X that it would be “economic nuclear war” for the US to impose its new retaliatory tariffs on many trading partners on 9 April, as planned. In a sign of Wall Street’s deep, growing anxiety about the trade war, Ackman says: But, by placing massive and disproportionate tariffs on our friends and our enemies alike and thereby launching a global economic war against the whole world at once, we are in the process of destroying confidence in our country as a trading partner, as a place to do business, and as a market to invest capital. The president has an opportunity to call a 90-day time out, negotiate and resolve unfair asymmetric tariff deals, and induce trillions of dollars of new investment in our country. Ackman also alleged that US Commerce secretary Howard Lutnick was conflicted because of his relationship with financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald, due to its exposure to the bond market (where price have been rising in the market crisis). Ackman claimed: I just figured out why @howardlutnick is indifferent to the stock market and the economy crashing. He and Cantor are long bonds. He profits when our economy implodes. It’s a bad idea to pick a Secretary of Commerce whose firm is levered long fixed income. It’s an irreconcilable conflict of interest. Lutnick stepped down as chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald when he was confirmed as Commerce secretary, with two of his sons taking top positions at the firm. European stock markets are heading for fresh heavy losses when bourses open in an hour’s time, following the slump in Asia-Pacific markets today. The Eurostoxx 50 index, of Europe’s 50 largest companies, is on track to fall round 4%. The futures market also indicates the UK’s main share index, the FTSE 100, could fall 2% at the open, at 8am. Wall Street is also on track for another rout. Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank, has the details: Wherever we look this morning, it’s a bloodbath. The S&P500 is down by almost 4% at the time of writing, Nasdaq futures are down by more than 4%, same for the European futures and the week hasn’t even started yet For those just catching up with today’s rout of Asian financial markets, here’s a recap of the continuing fallout from Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs amid fears of an escalating global trade war and a potential US recession. The US president said foreign governments would have to pay “a lot of money” to lift tariffs that he characterised as “medicine” as markets in Asia plunged in early trading on Monday, continuing a two-day sell off that wiped almost $5tn off the value of global stock markets last week. Trump indicated he was not concerned about the market losses, telling reporters late on Sunday: “I don’t want anything to go down. But sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something.” Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index tumbled nearly 9% as concerns over a tariff-induced global recession continued to rip through markets on Monday, reaching 30,792.74 for the first time since October 2023. Prime minister Shigeru Ishiba said his government would continue to ask Trump to lower tariffs but that results “won’t come overnight”. Hong Kong and Chinese stocks dived, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index down 8% in early trade. Shares in Chinese tech giants Alibaba and Tencent fell more than 8%. Taiwan’s stock exchange fell almost 10% on the Monday open, the first day of trading since the tariffs were announced. The drop marked the largest one-day point and percentage loss on record, according to local media. Trading on South Korea’s Kospi index was halted for five minutes as stocks plummeted. Australian shares were also sharply lower, with more than $160bn wiped off the markets in early trading. The US president said he had spoken to leaders from Europe and Asia over the weekend, who hope to convince him to lower tariffs that are as high as 50% and due to take effect this week. “They are coming to the table. They want to talk but there’s no talk unless they pay us a lot of money on a yearly basis,” Trump said. Trump’s tariff announcement last week jolted economies around the world, triggering retaliatory levies from China. Wall Street stock futures opened sharply lower on Sunday, in a sign of further turbulence after the worst week for US stocks since the onset of the Covid-19 crisis five years ago. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent said more than 50 nations had started negotiations with the US since last Wednesday’s tariffs announcement. – With reporting by Helen Davidson and agencies Donald Trump’s tariff measures could slow euro area economic growth by between 0.5 and 1 percentage points, the Greek central bank governor has told the Financial Times in an interview published on Monday Yannis Stournaras’s comments come against the backdrop of European Union countries weighing approval of a first set of targeted countermeasures on up to $28bn of US imports from dental floss to diamonds in the coming days, Reuters reports. The 27-nation bloc faces 25% import tariffs on steel and aluminium and cars and reciprocal tariffs of 20% from Wednesday for almost all other goods. In an interview with the newspaper, Stournaras warned that the looming global trade war risk sparking a large “negative demand shock” in the Eurozone that could weigh heavily on Europe’s economic growth. He told the FT: A notable adverse impact on growth could lead to activity being much weaker than expected, dragging inflation below our targets. The European Central Bank has estimated that a blanket U.S. tariff of 25% on European imports would lower euro zone growth by 0.3 percentage points in the first year. EU counter-tariffs on the US would raise this to half a percentage point. Donald Trump has said he won’t back down on his sweeping tariffs on imports from most of the world unless countries even out their trade with the US, digging in on his plans to implement the levies that have sent financial markets reeling and raised fears of a recession. Here’s video footage of the US president telling media he doesn’t want global markets to fall but also that he isn’t concerned about the huge sell-off, and “sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something”. Howmet Aerospace, which supplies parts for planes built by Airbus and Boeing, may halt some shipments if they are impacted by Donald Trump’s tariffs, according to a letter seen by Reuters. The Pittsburgh-based Howmet said in the letter to customers that it had declared a force majeure event – a legal practice that allows parties to a contract to avoid their obligations if hit by unavoidable and unpredictable external circumstances. The news agency quoted the company as writing in the letter: “Howmet will be excused from supplying any products or services that are impacted by this declared national emergency and/or the tariff executive order.” Howmet declined to comment. Howmet is a supplier of critical metal components used across the $150bn jetliner industry. Boeing and Airbus did not immediately reply to Reuters’ requests for comment on the letter, which three industry sources said went to multiple firms across the aerospace sector. It appeared to be the first such manoeuvre by a major aerospace company since the tariff announcement, one of the sources said. In the UK, Keir Starmer has said he wants to shelter Britain from the storm of Donald Trump’s escalating trade wars. Governments the world over are considering how best to respond to the turmoil unleashed on the global economy by the US president last week – and so far Britain has taken a measured approach, writes Richard Partington. That approach contrasts with the promises of retaliation from the European Union, China and Canada. For the British prime minister, however, there are tough economic and political considerations to weigh up. Click here for Partington’s report outlining the case for retaliation and the benefits of appeasement: India’s stock markets were among those that plunged on Monday morning in response to Trump’s tariffs and the wider volatility they have triggered across Asian markets. India’s BSE’s 30-share Sensex plunged 5.19% while the broader Nifty tumbled 5%. Analysts said that the escalating global trade war had unsettled Indian investors and intensified fears of an economic downturn impacting India. However, India found itself less rattled than other Asian countries after the announcement it would now face a 27% tariff on all goods brought into the US. Exports to the US represent just 2% of India’s GDP, meaning that while certain industrial sectors will take a hit, it’s unlikely to trigger a wider recession. As a country of 1.4 billion people, the Indian market itself is also huge and so industries could pivot to selling domestically. The exemption of two of India’s biggest exports – pharmaceuticals and energy – from tariffs has also softened the blow. Some analysts even presented the situation as a distinct advantage for India over its biggest manufacturing competitors such as China, Vietnam and Bangladesh which have been slapped with much higher tariffs by Trump. There is a suggestion that phone companies such as Samsung and Apple might move more production to India, over China and Vietnam, to take advantage of lower tariffs. It could also help India overtake Bangladesh’s dominance over the garment sector. Samsung Electronics’ television business is expected to be less affected by US tariffs than rivals because its TVs are mainly produced in Mexico, an executive said on Monday. However, the world’s top TV maker will still continue to watch the changing US tariff policy, and depending on tariffs, it plans to allocate production accordingly across about 10 production bases around the world, Yong Seok-woo, president of Samsung’s visual display business, says in a Reuters report. Mexico largely escaped Trump’s new 10% global baseline tariff and steeper “reciprocal tariffs” for many trading partners on Wednesday. In contrast, China will be hit with a 34% US tariff, on top of the 20% previously imposed earlier this year, bringing the total new levies to 54%. Continued from last post with more reaction from analysts to Monday’s continuation of the two-day selloff that wiped trillions of dollars from global equity values. KARL SCHAMOTTA, CHIEF MARKET STRATEGIST, CORPAY, TORONTO Financial markets are suffering an absolutely brutal selloff as Asian trading hours begin. After a series of Trump administration officials refused to countenance a reversal in the president’s seriously flawed tariff plans over the weekend, investors are marking down US assets and lowering global growth forecasts even further. A flight to safety is under way in currency markets, with the yen and euro climbing against the dollar. SEAN CALLOW, SENIOR FX ANALYST, ITC MARKETS, SYDNEY It will be all hands on deck for Asian policymakers today, but they know that they have limited control over market panic. The only real circuit breaker is President Trump’s iPhone and he is showing little sign that the market selloff is bothering him enough to reconsider a policy stance he has believed in for decades. DAVID SEIF, CHIEF ECONOMIST FOR DEVELOPED MARKETS, NOMURA, NEW YORK In market selloffs like this, panic and forced selling via margin calls can dominate for a while. That’s not to say that it isn’t based on a very real negative event, which is these tariffs. But I think the ensuing selloff can take on a life of its own. Bottom line, I’m not sure when stocks will find a bottom, but I don’t think stocks are returning to their pre-April 2 levels any time soon. ANINDA MITRA, HEAD OF ASIA MACRO STRATEGY, BNY INVESTMENT INSTITUTE, SINGAPORE The market may be justifiably concerned but it appears to be pricing in the worst of an adverse trajectory of trade policy shifts in the US. In this context, any (eventual) negotiated and downward adjustments in bilateral tariffs or a bigger-than-expected US fiscal offset or a quicker-than-expected Fed policy pivot may counter some of the headwinds. But until there is greater visibility in bilateral negotiations and tariff rollbacks, and other macro policy support, market volatility may stay elevated. Continued from last post: JASON WONG, SENIOR MARKET STRATEGIST, BNZ, WELLINGTON Trump’s not blinking yet, and his entourage aren’t blinking over the weekend ... but there comes a point, when they do capitulate, and you’re trying to play the market. As to when that might happen – we need some sort of Trump team response before the bleeding is going to stop. KAREN JORRITSMA, HEAD OF EQUITIES, AUSTRALIA, RBC CAPITAL, SYDNEY Trump got us into this. But what can get us out of it? It’s not him, if there’s no clear line of sight here to the exit point for this, or the catalyst for this to be over – that’s my concern. I think he felt he had control, but he hasn’t – he’s lost control. It’s gone too far. The Chinese have got involved ... ROBERT PAVLIK, SENIOR PORTFOLIO MANAGER, DAKOTA WEALTH, FAIRFIELD, CONNECTICUT One of the problems is that people were looking for some kind of comment over the weekend from somebody in the administration that would indicate some possible negotiation or maybe a change in the tariffs. But they seemed to dig in their heels so we’re down more than 4%. … People are real nervous about the uncertainty this brings, the potential decline in earnings, the fact the Federal Reserve has said they are going to wait and stay on hold until they get more clarity. If the Fed isn’t coming to the rescue, then who else is going to come to the rescue? People are afraid the worst is yet to come. They’re worried about a market crash. They’re worried about what follows, a recession here domestically and then globally, leading to a possible depression. JOHN MILROY, PRIVATE WEALTH ADVISOR, ORD MINNETT, SYDNEY All the conversations I have had with clients are more about when do we buy something rather than sell. This is leveraged selling that has no choice. I have fear for some of those private credit shops as prices and credit spreads swing wildly. Key in the short term is if China pulls the pin on a big stimulus package directed at consumers. The broader market was already expensive, always had to be a reckoning. Here it is. Next comes the earnings changes. ANGELO KOURKAFAS, SENIOR INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, EDWARD JONES, ST LOUIS Fear is what continues to drive market action since the April 2nd tariff announcement. I think many investors are fearing the worst-case scenario of a prolonged trade war. Until we get an off-ramp and some indication that we potentially are pivoting to cutting deals to lower tariffs, that sentiment will remain fragile. Continued next post What’s been the reaction of analysts to today’s drubbing of Asian share markets and US stock futures in response to the Trump tariffs? Here’s a range of voices, care of Reuters, on the continuation of a two-day selloff as fears of a global trade war led investors to ramp up bets on the risk of recession and a US interest rate cut as early as next month. TONY SYCAMORE, MARKET ANALYST, IG, SYDNEY Things have gone from bad to worse this morning. The lack of reaction from Trump and from Bessent [the US Treasury secretary], in terms of their concern levels, appearing to be very, very low in terms of the market dislocation. If there isn’t some sort of walking back of the announcements, then we’re heading for a liquidity event and liquidity will get sucked out of these markets big time across all asset classes. We’re already seeing that. We’re going to see obviously the US dollar return to being the kingmaker except against the yen. CHARU CHANANA, CHIEF INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, SAXO, SINGAPORE The lack of any policy response from the Trump administration on the market sell-off is adding to the uncertainty, reinforcing the idea that the current trajectory may remain unchanged in the near term. Unless we see a clear pivot from policymakers, volatility is likely to stay elevated, and the path of least resistance for risk assets remains to the downside. MATTHEW RUBIN, CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER, CARY STREET PARTNERS, NEW YORK One of the things that clearly clients have more exposure to today is private markets ... there’s a little bit more control there in the private markets of the portfolio because you take out some of the daily trading and the daily volatility. I think that’s important. I wouldn’t call that a refuge, though. This didn’t come out of some sort of exogenous risk that was uncovered. This is being brought on because of the tariffs. And none of us know when we’ll see more clarity or resolution, whether it be further negotiation and whether this is really about negotiation or whether this is about a fundamental change to try to reshape the manufacturing economy here in the US. DEAN FERGIE, DIRECTOR, CYAN INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT, MELBOURNE I expect a lot of panic selling this morning but over the coming days some level of rationality should prevail and we’ll see some buying support come in. The sectors to watch will be the financials/fund managers impacted by global market weakness, and the global discretionary stocks. Continued next post Among the governments already signalling a willingness to engage with the US to avoid Trump’s tariffs, Taiwan’s president has offered zero tariffs as the basis for negotiations. On Sunday Lai Ching-te pledged to remove trade barriers and said Taiwanese companies would raise their US investments. The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said he would seek a reprieve from a 17% tariff on the country’s goods during a planned meeting with Trump on Monday, Reuters reports. An Indian government official said the country did not plan to retaliate against a 26% tariff and that talks were under way with the US over a possible deal. In Italy, the prime minister, Giorgia Meloni – a Trump ally – pledged on Sunday to shield businesses that suffered damage from a planned 20% tariff on goods from the European Union. Italian wine producers and US importers at a wine fair in Verona on Sunday said business had already slowed and feared more lasting damage. India’s benchmark Nifty 50 is poised to open sharply lower on Monday. The GIFT Nifty futures were trading at 22,089 as of 7:55 am IST, indicating that the blue-chip Nifty 50 will open about 3.6% lower than Friday’s close of 22,904.45, Reuters is reporting. “We see the recent lows around 21,800 get re-tested on the Nifty 50 given this week’s price action,” said Abhishek Goenka, chief executive officer of India Forex and Asset Management. We remain cautious in the near term given the tariff-related uncertainty. Other Asian markets have slumped amid the worries of a global trade war and a US recession triggered by the Trump Administration’s tariffs regime. India’s central bank is widely expected to cut rates by 25 basis points amid expectations that monetary policy may turn more supportive as the tariffs threaten to hurt the economy. The Nifty 50 is trading about 13% lower than the record high levels hit in late September, as slowing earnings and growth triggered a $27-billion foreign exodus from domestic markets. Meanwhile, India is likely to meet its projected growth target of 6.3-6.8% for the fiscal year 2025-26 if oil prices remain below $70 a barrel, despite the global disruptions due to US tariff announcements, a finance ministry official said. Base metal prices in China fell sharply on Monday amid the escalating global trade war, with copper prices sliding to a more than three-month low. The most-traded copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) dropped 7% to 73,640 yuan per metric ton as of 0138 GMT, marking its lowest level in over three months since 3 January, Reuters reports. The benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was down 1.9% to $8,614.5 per metric ton. China – a top metals consumer – hit back on Friday with additional 34% tariffs on all US goods from 10 April, after Donald Trump imposed a 34% tariff on most Chinese goods as part of his sweeping reciprocal tariff program. A base metals trader said: With China’s markets closed last Friday, which coincides with significant declines in LME base metals, we anticipated a sharp drop in China’s commodity prices today. Some even hit their lower limits as soon as trading began. Another trader said: The retaliatory tariff makes us worry about trade war, which will impede economic growth globally. SHFE aluminium slid 4.5% to 19,515 yuan a ton, zinc lost 4.2% to 22,195 yuan, lead fell 2.4% to 16,810 yuan, while nickel was down 6.7% to 120,370 yuan, tin fell 6.5% to 273,680 yuan. Among other metals, LME aluminium lost 0.3% to $2,372.5 a ton, lead fell 0.3% to $1,901, zinc slid 0.8% to $2,639, tin was down 2.2% at $34,615 and nickel was down 0.1% at $14,775 a ton. South Korea’s finance minister has said the government will prepare support measures for sectors with urgent needs, ahead of Donald Trump’s 25% tariff coming into force this week. Choi Sang-mok “emphasised the need to analyse the impact on the macroeconomy and prepare support measures for sectors with urgent needs”, the ministry said in a statement on Monday . On 2 April, Trump introduced a blanket tariff on imports to the US and higher tariffs against “worst offenders”, including a 25% duty on imports from South Korea, set to come into force on Wednesday. Reuters also reports that South Korea’s exports to the US hit a record high of $127.8bn in 2024, with automobiles – the top-selling product – accounting for 27% of the total. On Monday, Choi and other policymakers also reviewed a response strategy ahead of the trade minister, Cheong In-kyo, visiting the US, the finance ministry said. Separately, South Korea’s financial regulator asked firms and state institutions on Monday to be prepared to provide liquidity support for exporting companies and their contractors hit by tariffs. In Australia, more than $160bn has been wiped off the Australian share market this morning as fears of a full-blown trade war grip investors, reports Jonathan Barrett. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 sank more than 6% to trade below the 7200-point mark within 15 minutes after the market opened on Monday. The Australian dollar, meanwhile, fell to its lowest level since Covid against the US dollar as global markets sell off against the prospects of a global recession. One Australian dollar was buying just 60 US cents on Monday morning after falling to a low of 59.64, its lowest point since April 2020, reports Luca Ittimani. It was worth 64 US cents on Wednesday, hours before Donald Trump set markets reeling with his tariff announcement. The Australian dollar also reached pandemic-era lows in Europe, with one dollar buying just 54.4 Euro cents or 46.2 British pence at its lowest point on Monday morning. Donald Trump says foreign governments will have to pay “a lot of money” to lift the sweeping tariffs he has characterised as “medicine” and which have routed Asian share markets. Those are among the top lines are in our latest full report on the turmoil. The Nikkei dropped as much as 8.8% to hit 30,792.74 for the first time since October 2023. In South Korea, trading on the Kospi index was halted for five minutes at 9.12am as stocks plummeted. The Taiwan stock exchange said early on Monday it would roll out more policies to stabilise markets if there were “irrational falls”. See the full report here: Hong Kong stocks have plummeted more than 9% at open, while Singapore stocks dropped over 7%, according to reports. Hong Kong and Chinese stocks dived on Monday as markets around the world crumbled in the face of the widening global trade war and fears it will unleash a deep recession, Reuters says. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was down 8% in early trade. Shares in online giants Alibaba and Tencent were down more than 8%. China’s CSI300 blue-chip index fell 4.5%. China, which is now facing US tariffs of more than 50%, responded in kind on Friday by slapping extra levies on US imports. Taiwan stocks plummeted almost 10% on Monday in their first trading since Donald Trump announced his new tariffs regime last week, with the head of the island’s stock exchange saying it would roll out more stabilisation policies if needed. After opening on Monday following a two-day market holiday on Thursday and Friday, Taiwan’s benchmark index dropped to its lowest level in more than a year, Reuters reports. Taiwan’s top financial regulator on Sunday announced it would impose temporary curbs lasting all this week on short-selling of shares to help deal with potential market turmoil from the tariffs. Shares in chipmaker TSMC and electronics maker Foxconn both fell near 10%, triggering the 10% circuit breaker in the Taiwan market. Speaking to reporters shortly after the market opened, Taiwan stock exchange chairman Sherman Lin said it would coordinate with the financial regulator to take further stabilisation steps if needed. The stock exchange would maintain flexibility in stabilisation measures this week to handle volatility stemming from new U.S. import tariffs, Lin added. He said it would be hard for Taiwan to escape the market impact of the tariffs, but called on investors to have confidence in Taiwanese companies and the government. US Treasury yields fell on Monday and the two-year yield sank to a multi-year low as worries of a possible recession in the world’s largest economy grew and investors wagered that could see US rates cut as early as May. The two-year US Treasury yield, which typically reflects near-term rate expectations, tumbled more than 20 basis points to its lowest level since September 2022 at 3.4350%, as investors ramped up bets of more aggressive Federal Reserve easing this year, Reuters reports. The benchmark 10-year yield last stood at 3.9158%, languishing near Friday’s six-month low of 3.8600%. Futures now point to nearly 120 basis points’ worth of Fed cuts by December and markets swung to imply a roughly 60% chance the US central bank could ease rates in May, as policymakers seek to shore up growth in the world’s largest economy on the back of President Donald Trump’s latest tariff salvo. JPMorgan ratcheted up its odds for a U.S. and global recession to 60%, as mentioned, and brokerages elsewhere similarly raised their probability of a US recession as tariff distress threatens to sap business confidence and slow global growth. Japan’s Nikkei share average tumbled nearly 9% early on Monday, while an index of Japanese bank stocks plunged as much as 17%, as concerns over a tariff-induced global recession continue to rip through markets. The Nikkei dropped as much as 8.8% to hit 30,792.74 for the first time since October 2023. The index was trading down 7.3% at 31,318.79, as of 0034 GMT, Reuters reports. All 225 component stocks of the index were trading in the red. The broader Topix sank 8% to 2,284.69. A topix index of banking shares slumped as much as 17.3%, and was last down 13.2%. The bank index has borne the brunt of the sell-off in Japanese equities, plunging as much as 30% over the past three sessions. The Nikkei 225 has now dived nearly 8% after the Wall Street meltdown over Donald Trump’s tariffs. Japan’s benchmark stock index sank 7.8% to lows last seen in late 2023. South Korea lost 4.6%. As reported earlier, Trump said of the falling markets that “medicine” could be necessary at times and he was not intentionally engineering a market selloff. “I don’t want anything to go down, but sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something,” the US president told reporters aboard Air Force One. The market carnage came as White House officials showed no sign of backing away from their sweeping tariff plans, Reuters reports, and China declared the markets had spoken on their retaliation through levies on US goods. Trump said he would not do a deal with China until the US trade deficit was sorted out. Almost $5tn was wiped off the value of global stock markets last week after Donald Trump launched his tariff offensive last Wednesday. The US market was particularly hard hit. The benchmark S&P 500 lodged its biggest weekly drop since March 2020 and the Nasdaq Composite on Friday ended down more than 20% from its December record high, confirming the tech-heavy index is in a bear market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished the week down well over 10% from its December record high, marking a correction for the blue-chip index. Oil prices fell more than 3% on Monday – extending losses from the previous week – on growing concerns that a global trade war could slow the global economy and weaken oil demand. Brent futures declined $2.1, or 3.2%, to $63.48 a barrel at 1027 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate crude futures lost $2.14, or 3.5%, to $59.85, Reuters reports. Both benchmarks plunged 7% on Friday to settle at their lowest in over three years as China ramped up tariffs on US goods in retaliation at Donald Trump’s tariffs, escalating a trade war that has led investors to price in a higher probability of recession. Responding to Trump’s tariffs, China on Friday said it would impose additional levies of 34% on American goods, confirming investor fears that a full-blown global trade war is under way. Investment bank JPMorgan said it now saw a 60% chance of a global economic recession by year-end, up from 40% previously. Japan’s Nikkei index has plunged more than 7%, Agence France-Presse is reporting, after having it down 5% and, a little earlier, 3.6% following its opening today. The fall extends last week’s 9% drop – its steepest one-week percentage decline since March 2020. Donald Trump has said about falling markets that “medicine” can be necessary at times, adding that he was not intentionally engineering a market selloff. “I don’t want anything to go down, but sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something,” the US president told reporters aboard Air Force One on the economic fallout from his sweeping tariffs. Hello and welcome to our business blog covering the global fallout to the tariffs imposed by Donald Trump last week. The US president’s decision to bring in levies of up to 50% on imports into the US rocked stock markets. As a new week dawns, traders, investors and consumers across the world are braced for further falls. Stay with us to follow all the developments.
Author: Adam Fulton (earlier) and Graeme Wearden (now)