March 24 (Reuters) - The first three months of 2025
promised to be bumpy, but few expected the world to be on the
verge of a full-on trade war and for investors to be fleeing
Wall Street quite so fast after U.S. President Donald Trump's
return to the White House.
Investors in emerging markets have been rattled by a spate
of domestic crises and UK markets are facing a reckoning of
their own as the impact of Trump's tariffs becomes apparent in
global economic data.
Here's a look at what's coming for markets from Rae Wee in
Singapore; Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Naomi Rovnick, Karin
Strohecker and Amanda Cooper in London.
1/TIARA TIME?
U.S. equities are bleeding money at one of the fastest weekly
rates on record, and the cash is finding a home in previously
neglected markets. Europe's STOXX 600 is set for a gain
of 9.3% in the first quarter, against the S&P's 4.5%
loss, its strongest performance against the U.S. benchmark in
the first 12 weeks of the year since 2015.
Defence stocks have led the charge higher as European
leaders have sought ways to fund spending on security, with U.S.
support no longer seeming to be a given. Chinese tech stocks
have shot up, with a regional index over 30% higher, while a
basket of Wall Street's Big Tech stocks is down 15%.
World stocks minus the United States are
heading for their best first-quarter performance since 2019.
Move over, TINA - There Is No Alternative -. Investors are
considering TIARA - There Is A Real Alternative - to U.S.
stocks.
2/ROUGH RIDE
Selloffs in Turkey, Indonesia and Colombia in recent days
have focused investors' minds on slow-burning issues plaguing
some developing economies.
A return to orthodox monetary policy over the past two years had
seen investors warm to Turkey again. But authorities detaining
Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, President Tayyip Erdogan's main
political rival, caused a lira rout and sent stocks and bonds
sharply lower, prompting the central bank to raise overnight
lending rates.
Worries over Indonesia's fiscal strategy and growth outlook
roiled the rupiah and stocks, prompting central bank
intervention. Also, Colombia's finance minister resigned amid
clashes over budget cuts, hours after lawmakers rejected a
labour reform by leftist President Gustavo Petro, who has
already replaced 12 of his 19 ministers.
3/DATA DIVE
Investors wary of signs of slowing growth and tariff
uncertainty get a raft of fresh U.S. data in the coming week,
including a key inflation gauge.
February's personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index,
a closely watched measure of inflation, is due on March 28. The
Federal Reserve on Wednesday lifted its expectation for PCE,
projecting it would end the year at 2.7%, up from a previous
forecast of 2.5% - above its 2% target for annual inflation.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell has signalled the U.S. central bank will
wait for more clarity on Trump administration policies as it
assesses when to resume rate cuts.
Measures of consumer confidence and consumer sentiment will also
be in the spotlight after U.S. retail sales rebounded marginally
in February.
4/BLEAK BRITAIN
UK investors are about to discover whether weak growth and
unexpectedly high borrowing have blown the Labour government's
budget goals far enough off course for markets to call for a
return to austerity measures.
Alongside finance minister Rachel Reeves' March 26 Spring
Statement, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) is
expected to reduce forecasts that, back in October, assumed the
government would just meet its self-imposed spending rules.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies has warned that even a minor
OBR downgrade would force Reeves to choose between tax
increases, spending cuts or months of "damaging speculation"
about what she will do in the Autumn budget.
Long-term UK debt costs set by the gilt markets are
about 15 basis points (bps) below January's multi-decade highs
after Labour's welfare cut pledges, but bond investors are on
high alert for a rule breach the government cannot fix.
5/PULSE CHECK
Australia and Tokyo will get their inflation report cards in the
week ahead, as central bankers around the world try to assess
the impact of Trump's tariff policies on global price
pressures.
Australian consumer prices on Wednesday are expected to have
held steady in February. This could support the still-cautious
Reserve Bank of Australia's patient approach to future rate
cuts.
Tokyo inflation is due on Friday, as the Bank of Japan (BOJ)
continues to monitor mounting domestic price pressures that
could warrant further monetary tightening.
The BOJ kept rates unchanged at its March meeting and offered
few hints on the timing of its next rate hike. But Governor
Kazuo Ueda suggested the central bank could deliver one even
before the dust settles on the impact of U.S. tariffs.
(Compiled by Amanda Cooper; Graphics by Sumanta Sen, Kripa
Jayaram and Pasit Kongkunakornkul; Editing by Timothy Heritage)
(c) Reuters 2025. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.