Trump, Market and stock futures
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I N ITS SCOPE and severity, the trade war took markets by surprise. On April 3rd, the day after President Donald Trump laid out an unprecedented array of tariffs, the Russell 3000, one of the broadest measures of the American stockmarket,
Alarm about the fallout from President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs gripped global financial markets, with Wall Street's fear level at a five-year high while financial executives expressed shock and worry about economic growth.
As countries around the world scramble to negotiate for relief from US President Donald Trump’s escalation last week of a global trade war, China has taken a different tack.
Faced with economic disruption, Beijing is presenting itself as too powerful to succumb to U.S. pressure and casting itself as a responsible champion of fair trade.
Hong Kong and Chinese stocks dived on Monday as markets around the world crumbled in the face of a widening global trade war and fears it will unleash a deep recession.
A roller-coaster quarter for markets is ending with little relief, as President Donald Trump’s disruptive trade policies and rising stagflation fears drive investors toward risk aversion.
Another way to wade through the current market volatility, according to Pranay Aggarwal - Director & CEO of Stoxkart, is to avoid panic selling, continue doing systematic investment plans (SIPs) in mutual funds (MFs), and consider buying quality stocks at discounted prices.
By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed NEW YORK (Reuters) -Volatility measures across global financial markets jumped on Friday and Wall Street's top "fear gauge" soared to an eight-month high as China imposed fresh tariffs on all U.
Unless the VIX cools off to levels around 18, market experts believe volatile swings in the markets could be the new norm
The U.S. economy has largely withstood inflation and high interest rates. But tariffs could bring new price increases and put a damper on hiring.
Indian shares fell sharply on Monday as concerns over a trade war and growing recession fears in the U.S. continued to fuel a global stock market rout.