BusinessFinanceMarketsNews

Trading Day: Another vote of consumer no confidence

No Comments

By Jamie McGeever

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – TRADING DAY

Making sense of the forces driving global markets

By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist

U.S. consumer confidence sinks

What started out as a positive day for world stocks on Tuesday fizzled as the U.S. session progressed, after another steep plunge in U.S. consumer confidence reminded investors of the challenges facing the world’s largest economy.

The MSCI All Country global index hit a near-three week high before easing back when Wall Street got up and running. Perhaps the big surprise was that resilience in tech stocks meant the three main U.S. indices closed the day higher and shrugged off the growing mismatch between the rosy earnings outlook and darkening economic horizon.

I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out to me with comments at . You can also follow me at [@ReutersJamie and @reutersjamie.bsky.social.]

Today’s Key Market Moves

* The Nasdaq’s 0.5% gain lifts Wall Street, as equityinvestors show more optimism than others that President Trumpmay relent on tariffs. Consumer cyclicals and tech lead the way. * The dollar dips vs G10 currencies, especially againstthe yen, while gold gains 0.3% to close above $3,000 an ouncefor a seventh day. * U.S. bond yields dip, led by the short-end. Weak consumerconfidence and a well-received $69 billion auction of 2-yearnotes turns a mild bear-steepening to a mild bull-steepeninglater in the day. * Oil hits a three-week high before ending lower on theRussia-Ukraine ‘sea and energy’ truce covering the Black Sea andenergy infrastructure. This snaps a four-day winning streak. * Turkish markets cheer pledges from the finance ministerand central bank governor to do whatever it takes to tame thecurrent market turmoil. Stocks claw back 4.5% and the lirasteadies at just under 38 per dollar. * Hong Kong-listed Chinese tech shares slide 3.8% to athree-week low as Xiaomi’s planned share sale sparks valuationconcerns. The Hang Seng tech index is down 10% in the last week.

Another vote of consumer no confidence

First the University of Michigan, now the Conference Board.

Two of America’s most closely-watched consumer surveys show that consumers, who account for 70% of all economic activity, are spooked by President Donald Trump’s tariff agenda.

The Conference Board survey published on Tuesday showed that confidence has fallen to the lowest in four years and the expectations index is at a 12-year low, breaching a level associated with an economic downturn.

It doesn’t bode well for growth and, ultimately, corporate profits – more on that below. The tariff situation is extremely fluid as Trump’s April 2 deadline for a whole raft of new duties draws closer, and on Tuesday Europe’s top trade official was due to meet with Trump’s top trade officials for talks.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.
You need to agree with the terms to proceed