A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from
Kevin Buckland
President Donald Trump's tariffs are more on-again than
off-again as we head into the end of a dramatic week of
courtroom surprises, which initially had investors cheering but
then left them with little more than an additional source of
uncertainty.
Looking around Asia in early trading, losses to Japan's
Nikkei stand out. Stocks in Tokyo were hit by an additional
whammy from renewed demand for the safe-haven yen, which
undercuts the value of overseas revenues for the index's
heavyweight exporters.
The drop in Hong Kong's Hang Seng was also eye-catching,
with both benchmarks essentially giving up all of the sizeable
gains of the day before.
When the little-known United States Court of International
Trade on Wednesday unexpectedly blocked the bulk of Trump's
aggressive levies, on the grounds that he had overstepped his
authority, there was some inkling that the judiciary could
provide a check on his often erratic policymaking.
But a day later those tariffs were back, reinstated by an
appeals court while it considers the case. That is by no means a
foreshadowing of its eventual ruling, but Trump's team is
already saying it has other avenues to keep the tariffs in
effect.
For businesses, consumers and central banks, it's just one
more reason to sit on their hands, pushing out already delayed
decisions on hiring, spending or cutting rates.
For U.S. trade partners, though, the Trump administration
assures us that good-faith negotiations continue undeterred.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent pointed specifically to
high-level talks he will have with a Japanese delegation in
Washington later today.
Despite Trump's optimism, deals have been hard to come by -
a broad agreement with Britain is the only one so far. And
Bessent acknowledged talks with China are "a bit stalled",
adding they may require the direct involvement of Trump and
Chinese President Xi Jinping.
The courtroom drama around tariffs came just as tariff
revenues were starting to pick up. Donald Schneider at Piper
Sandler on social media platform X this week estimated them at
an annualised pace of $255 billion, up from a norm of about $85
billion.
That would be welcome news as the sweeping tax cuts and
spending measures in Trump's "big, beautiful bill", which is
about to go to the Senate, have been fanning worries about U.S.
fiscal sustainability.
One critic of the bill has been Elon Musk, and there were
signs that what looked to be a quiet exit from his work at DOGE
might carry some bad blood.
But Trump has since announced a big sending off with a joint
press conference at the Oval Office for later today, adding that
although it'll be the Tesla and SpaceX CEO's last day on the
government payroll, "he will always be with us".
The air also seems less heavy between Trump and Fed Chair
Jay Powell following a private meeting in the Oval Office on
Thursday. While the president reiterated his feeling that the
central bank is making a mistake by not lowering rates, the lack
of any name-calling in social media posts afterwards may have
come as a relief to markets that were roiled last month by
Trump's public threats to fire the Fed chief.
Key developments that could influence markets on Friday:
-Germany consumer inflation data (May)
-Bank of Italy Governor Panetta speaks in Rome
-Fed speakers include San Francisco Fed President Daly,
Dallas Fed President Logan, Atlanta Fed President Bostic and
Chicago Fed President Goolsbee
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