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Over in the US on Monday, stocks were heavily sold off in morning trade before recovering some losses in afternoon trade amid news of tariffs between the US and Mexico would be paused for a month as conversations between the presidents of the countries begin. The Dow Jones fell 0.28%, the S&P500 lost 0.76%, and the Nasdaq ended the day down 1.2%.
In Europe overnight markets closed lower after President Trump imposed tariffs on several countries and threatened to expand the tariffs to the European Union and the UK. The STOXX 600 fell 0.93%, Germany’s DAX lost 1.4%, the French CAC fell 1.2%, and, in the UK, the FTSE100 ended the day down 1.04%.
Across the Asia region on Monday negative investor sentiment around Trump’s tariffs spread into the region with Japan’s Nikkei falling 2.66% while South Korea’s Kospi lost 2.52%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped just 0.04% and, China’s CSI index remained closed for the Lunar holiday.
The local market started the new trading week with a significant sell-off, closing Monday’s session down 1.79% with every sector ending the day lower as investors reacted to the downside risk of flow through effects into our economy from Trump’s tariffs announced over the weekend.
Over the weekend President Trump introduced 25% tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports and an additional 10% tariff on Chinese goods, which led Canada to retaliate with a 25% tariff on US goods into Canada.
There were few stories of good news on the market on Monday, but Lynas Rare Earths led the ASX200 gains with a rise of 3% despite no news out of the rare earth’s producer. The possible catalyst for the rise in the share price may be due to Gina Rinehart’s Hancock
Prospecting buying up shares in the rare earth’s producer over recent days.
Magellan shares also tumbled 8.7% yesterday following the departure of the company’s long-standing boss Gerald Stack.
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