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Trump threatens to further hike China tariffs
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EU floats 25% counter-tariffs
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Asian and European stocks plunge, US Dow and S&P indexes
end
lower
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Countries seek to negotiate ahead of Wednesday deadline
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China calls Trump's threat "economic bullying"
By Steve Holland, Doina Chiacu, Julia Payne
WASHINGTON/BRUSSELS, April 7 (Reuters) - A global trade
war touched off by U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping
tariffs escalated further on Monday, as Trump threatened to
increase duties on China and the European Union proposed
counter-tariffs of its own.
Financial markets across the globe posted a third day of losses
as investors worried that steep trade barriers around the
world's largest consumer market could lead to a recession. The
S&P 500 closed lower after a rollercoaster session in which it
touched its lowest level in more than a year.
Trump said the tariffs - a minimum of 10% for all U.S.
imports, with targeted rates of up to 50% - would help the
United States recapture an industrial base that he says has
withered over decades of trade liberalization.
"It's the only chance our country will have to reset the
table. Because no other president would be willing to do what
I'm doing, or to even go through it," he told reporters at the
White House. "Now, I don't mind going through it because I see a
beautiful picture at the end."
Trump spoke hours after he ratcheted up a confrontation with
China, the world's No. 2 economy.
Trump said he would impose an additional 50% duty on U.S.
imports from China on Wednesday if it did not withdraw the 34%
tariffs it had imposed on U.S. products last week. Those Chinese
tariffs had come in response to 34% "reciprocal" duties
announced by Trump.
Beijing responded with defiance. Trump's threat was a
"typical move of unilateralism, protectionism and economic
bullying," Chinese embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said.
"We have stressed more than once that pressuring or
threatening China is not a right way to engage with us," he
added. "China will firmly safeguard its legitimate rights and
interests."
The European Commission, meanwhile, proposed counter-tariffs of
25% on a range of U.S. goods, including soybeans, nuts and
sausages, though other potential items like bourbon whiskey were
left off the list, according to a document seen by Reuters.
Officials said they stood ready to negotiate a "zero for
zero" deal with Trump's administration. "Sooner or later, we
will sit at the negotiation table with the U.S. and find a
mutually acceptable compromise," EU Trade Commissioner Maros
Sefcovic said at a news conference.
The 27-member bloc is struggling with tariffs on autos and
metals already in place, and faces a 20% tariff on other
products on Wednesday. Trump has also threatened to slap tariffs
on EU alcoholic drinks.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent met with Trump in
Florida on Sunday, Politico reported, to urge him to emphasize
striking trade deals with partners in order to reassure the
markets that there is an endgame to the U.S. strategy.
Trump said his administration would open trade talks with
Japan, one of Washington's closest allies in Asia, and
administration officials say dozens of other countries have
reached out as well with the hope of heading off the tariffs as
high as 50% due to take effect on Wednesday.
The back-and-forth injected further turbulence into global
financial markets, which have fallen steadily since Trump's
announcement.
Trump administration officials say the president is
following through on a promise to reverse decades of trade
liberalization that he believes has undercut the U.S. economy.
"He's doubling down on something that he knows works, and
he's going to continue to do that," White House economist Kevin
Hassett said on Fox News. "But he is also going to listen to our
trading partners, and if they come to us with really great deals
that advantage American manufacturing and American farmers, I'm
sure he'll listen."
China's retaliatory levies are the firmest response yet to
Trump's announcement, which has been met with bewildered
condemnation from other leaders.
After stocks in mainland China and Hong Kong cratered on Monday,
China's sovereign fund stepped in to try to stabilise the
market.
Shares in Taiwan plummeted almost 10% - the biggest one-day
percentage fall on record.
Wall Street leaders issued warnings on U.S. tariffs, with
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon saying they could have
lasting negative consequences, while fund manager Bill Ackman
said they could lead to an "economic nuclear winter."
Ackman is one of a handful of Trump supporters who questioned
the strategy. Billionaire Elon Musk, who is leading Trump's
effort to slash government spending, called for zero tariffs
between the U.S. and Europe over the weekend.
On Monday, Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro dismissed the
Tesla CEO as a "car assembler."
NEW REALITY OR NEGOTIATING PLOY?
Investors and political leaders have struggled to determine
whether Trump's tariffs are permanent or a pressure tactic to
win concessions from other countries.
Some in the EU worry that a forceful response risks even more
blowback on European exporters of everything from French cognac
and Italian wine to German cars.
Volkswagen's Audi is holding back cars that arrived
in U.S. ports after April 2 because of the newly imposed 25%
auto tariff. Aircraft parts supplier Howmet Aerospace
may halt some shipments if they are impacted by tariffs,
according to a letter seen by Reuters.
Some governments in Asia have signalled a willingness to
engage.
Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te on Sunday offered zero tariffs
as the basis for talks, while an Indian government official said
Delhi does not plan to retaliate.
Investors are now betting that the growing risk of recession
could prompt the U.S. Federal Reserve to cut rates as early as
next month. Trump repeated his call for the central bank to
lower rates on Monday, but Fed chief Jerome Powell has so far
indicated he is in no rush.
(Reporting by Reuters newsrooms; Writing by Andy Sullivan, James
Oliphant, Matthias Williams and John Geddie; Editing by Lincoln
Feast, Hugh Lawson, Nick Zieminski and Matthew Lewis)
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