
NEW YORK: Global shares rallied, while gold and safe-haven currencies slumped against a resurgent dollar on Monday (May 12) as the US and China agreed to temporarily slash harsh reciprocal tariffs and cooperate to avoid rupturing the global economy.
Following weekend talks in Geneva, both sides agreed that the US would drop levies on Chinese imports from 145 per cent to 30 per cent during a 90-day negotiation period and China would cut duties from 125 per cent to 10 per cent.
Wall Street stocks made significant gains, with the S&P 500 index jumping 3.3 per cent and the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite advancing 4.4 per cent.
In a joint statement on Monday, Washington and Beijing said they recognised the importance of their bilateral trade relationship to both countries and the global economy, in language that analysts said had brightened the market outlook.
An index tracking the dollar against other major currencies rose further from last month’s three-year trough with an almost 1.17 per cent gain, while Japan’s yen fell 2.1 per cent to 148.39 per dollar.
The retreat from safe-haven assets pushed Switzerland’s franc 1.8 per cent lower on the day, in a jolt of relief for Swiss exporters and the nation’s central bank.
Spot gold prices, which hit an all-time high of US$3,500 last month and often move inversely to the dollar, fell 2.7 per cent to US$3,234.8 an ounce.
“This is a textbook recovery after the market’s waterfall declines,” said Gina Bolvin, the president of Bolvin Wealth Management Group in Boston. “The market is blowing through resistance levels and if it sticks, this is a big ‘WIN’ for Trump, for stocks and for investors.”
The euro, which surged in April as investors questioned the dollar’s long-held status as the world’s reserve currency, was 1.4 per cent lower at US$1.1090.
“RELIEF”
Kit Juckes, chief FX strategist at Societe Generale, said the tariff pause was a “substantial relief” for the US and China.
With tariff anxiety having already caused some Chinese exporters to consider their futures, data this weekend showed the nation’s factory-gate prices had dropped by the most in six months in April.
Trump’s erratic trade policies had also sparked fears over US corporate earnings, with investors having entered this week nervous about an impending update from retail giant Walmart after a slew of US multi-nationals pulled their forecasts.
On Monday, however, commodities traders rushed to reassess the recessionary risks of tariff uncertainty, with oil traders pricing Brent crude for delivery next month almost 1.9 per cent higher at US$65.10 a barrel, up from around US$57 a week ago.
Europe’s regional STOXX 600 was last trading 1.2 per cent higher, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index ended the day with an almost 3 per cent gain.