GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks lose ground amid inflation concerns, trade war worries
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Stocks struggle over tariff concerns
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Gold scores fresh record high, oil slips
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Bond markets increasingly pricing in recession risks
By
U.S. traders had new sticky inflation data to grumble about but it was Trump's 25% tariffs on auto imports and plans for much broader levies next week that continued to cause the nail-biting.
On
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.62% to 41,620.85, the S&P 500 fell 1.88% to 5,586.60 and the Nasdaq Composite fell 2.60% to 17,340.79.
MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe fell 1.53% to 830.40. It is on track to end the week down 1.39%.
"What I don't know is whether the hawkishness of the auto tariffs is going to translate to the broader tariffs that we are going to get next week," Metcalfe said. "And that is keeping risk appetite on the back foot."
Gold prices meanwhile set yet another new peak of
"We continue to see inflation as being stubborn, sticky and just won't go away. The geopolitical environment continues to be risky and elevated ... You can see the fiscal risk on the U.S. budget side but also broader western sovereign debt and it's getting challenging with the budget continuing to run a deficit increasingly and interest rates remaining stubbornly high," Latif said.
In the bond market, U.S. Treasury yields declined as investors assessed the likely negative hit on growth from Trump's tariffs. Traders in interest rate futures were betting on a total of about 66 basis points in interest rate cuts this year, according to LSEG data.
The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes fell 10.8 basis points to 4.261%.
Traders now see an 80% chance of a 25-basis-point (bps) ECB rate cut in April from around a 50% chance a week ago. German Bund yields, the euro zone's benchmark of borrowing costs, rose 0.2 basis points to 2.735%.
In currency markets, the dollar weakened against major including the Japanese yen and euro after the hotter-than-expected U.S. inflation data added to concerns about tariffs.
The euro has been one of the big beneficiaries of the greenback's struggles. It is up 4.2% this week against the greenback.
The dollar weakened 0.7% to 150 against the Japanese yen
, while the euro rose 0.17% at
In commodities, oil prices turned flat as traders assessed a tightening of crude supplies along with new U.S. tariffs and their expected effect on the world's economy.
Brent crude futures were at
(Reporting by
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