GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks slide; bonds, gold buoyed as tariffs stoke recession fears

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STOXX 600 falls 1.7%, U.S. futures lower
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Nikkei dives over 4%
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Trump says US tariffs to cover all countries
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Flight to safety buoys bonds, gold hits record
By
Trump's comments to reporters on Air Force One seemed to dash hopes the levies would be limited to a smaller group of countries with the biggest trade imbalances.
Trump is due to receive tariff recommendations on Tuesday and announce initial levels on Wednesday, followed by auto tariffs the day after.
"What the Trump administration has shown us so far is that
you should not expect a consistent approach," said
"This is what scares the market the most. Inconsistency breeds uncertainty, and markets hate uncertainty."
S&P 500 futures lost over 1%, extending losses after Friday's 2% drop, while Nasdaq futures shed 1.5%.
MSCI's broadest index of
Seeking any safe harbour from the trade storm, investors piled into sovereign bonds and the Japanese yen and pushed gold prices to another all-time high.
"For the first time in years, we find ourselves genuinely
worried about risk assets," said
"If policy chaos and trade wars worsen much further, a recession is now a realistic risk across major economies," he added. "For the first time in many quarters, we favour core fixed income over global equities."
THAT "R" WORD
Many economists are worried that tariffs will hit the U.S. economy hard, even as they limit the Federal Reserve's scope to cut rates by driving inflation in the short term.
Analysts at Goldman Sachs now see a 35% chance of a U.S.
recession, up from 20% previously, saying they expect Trump to
announce reciprocal tariffs that average 15% across all U.S.
trading partners on
Data out on Friday underlined the risks as a key measure of core inflation rose by more than expected in February while consumer spending disappointed.
That raised the stakes for the March payrolls report due on Friday where any outcome below the 140,000 gain expected would only add to recession fears. Also due are a rush of surveys on factories and services, along with figures on trade and job openings.
Bond investors seemed to be betting the slowdown in U.S. economic growth will outweigh a temporary lift in inflation and prompt the Fed to cut rates by about 80 basis points this year.
This, combined with a flight from risk assets, saw the
10-year Treasury yield drop as low as 4.184% while
the two-year yield hit 3.842%.
The outlook for rates could become clearer when Fed Chair
The drop in U.S. yields saw the dollar ease 0.4% to
The perceived safety of gold saw the metal hit another
all-time high at
Brent rose 0.8% to
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