GRAPHIC-Investors stunned by Trump tariffs prepare for global growth shock
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Investors pull out their recession playbooks
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Rush into bonds may be scuppered by inflation
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US stocks to continue with falls,
By
Trump imposed heftier tariffs than investors expected on
Wednesday, announcing a 10% baseline tariff on all imports,
including 34% on
The question is to what extent the measures are a negotiating tactic, how much U.S. partners will retaliate and how fast tariff fallout feeds into economic pain.
Here's a look at some markets in focus right now:
1/ RECESSION RISK
With tariffs set to hit economic growth and raising the odds for a global recession, it's no surprise that traders are ramping up their central bank rate-cut bets.
They now see over 80 basis points (bps) of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve this year, versus closer to 70 bps before Trump's announcement.
Even before Wednesday's announcement, JPMorgan saw a 40% chance of a U.S. recession this year.
"We don't know where those tariffs are going to end up, but it's negative for global growth," Columbia Threadneedle Investments CIO William Davies said.
The U.S. dollar slid almost 2% percent against a basket of peers on Thursday, bringing its loss to over 6% so far this year with investors shunning it as a safe-haven for now.
"There's a nervousness that everybody loses in terms of
growth and the U.S. is one of the bigger losers," said Societe
Generale's chief currency strategist
With Asian countries being hit with some of the highest
tariffs, the dong in
But the euro surged above
Juckes said while the tariffs would hurt
3/ NIGHTMARE ON WALL STREET
"The US has been showing signs of weakness recently and there is nothing in what is going on now that will help it in the short and medium term," Premier Miton CIO Neil Birrell said.
Overseas investors and retirement savers have ploughed
Saxo global head of investment strategy Jacob Falkencrone added that the surge in the U.S. tariff rate was a tax on consumption and corporate costs, especially for industries relying on imports.
"The result? Higher prices, tighter margins, weaker growth-and a heightened risk of recession."
4/ SPREAD THE PAIN
It's not just U.S. stocks in the doldrums.
In
Investors were now scouring the globe for assets that could be less exposed to trade and tariff shocks in the medium term.
Aberdeen portfolio manager
"I'm relatively positive on
5/ BACK TO SAFETY
While they have shunned the dollar, investors are still rushing to safe U.S. Treasuries. U.S. 10-year yields dropped more than 10 basis points to their lowest since October at 4.04% .
That's a remarkable turnaround from January, when they surged to a more than one-year above 4.8%, as markets focused on heavy debt and deficit levels.
Marlborough chief investment officer
But UBS head of European rates strategy
(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli, Naomi Rovnick and
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