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20 February 2019
Financial Markets (The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions) |
Stocks were mostly higher in Europe and Asia on Wednesday after U.S.
President Donald Trump suggested trade talks with China do not face a hard
March 1 deadline for a deal.
Negotiators from both sides resumed talks Tuesday in Washington
following discussions in Beijing last week that U.S. officials said had made
some progress on difficult issues such as China's blueprint for making its
industries world leaders in advanced technologies such as robotics and artificial
intelligence.
"They are very complex talks. They're going very well," Trump
told reporters Tuesday.
Trump has hiked tariffs on billions of dollars' worth of Chinese goods
and the U.S. is due to increase them on March 2, following a 90-day truce to allow
time for the negotiations now underway.
But Trump indicated there might not be a hard deadline for striking a
deal, saying that March 1 is "not a magical date."
That lifted the mood of investors jittery over further potential
disruptions to world markets and trade.
Germany's DAX jumped 0.3 percent to 11,343 and the FTSE 100 in Britain
added 0.3 percent to 7,199. The CAC 40 in France also picked up 0.3 percent to
5,174.
Wall Street was poised for a slightly lower or flat open, with the
future contract for the Dow 0.1 percent lower at 25,848 and the S&P 500
also down about 0.1 percent, at 2,776.
In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 0.6 percent to close at 21,431.49
despite news that Japan's exports sank 8.4 percent in January from a year
earlier, far more than forecast.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index jumped 1.0 percent to 28,514.05 and the
Shanghai Composite reversed early losses to gain 0.2 percent, finishing at
2,761.22. South Korea's Kospi jumped 1.1 percent to 2,229.76 and the S&P
ASX 200 slipped 0.2 percent to 6,096.50.
JAPAN TRADE: A 17 percent drop in Japan's exports to China and 13
percent decline in exports to the rest of Asia including China helped drag
overall exports sharply lower. Japan's imports fell 0.6 percent, leaving a
deficit of 1.4 trillion yen ($12.8 billion), up 50 percent from a year earlier
and the biggest such gap since March 2014. The weak numbers suggest China's
slowdown and trade tensions with the United States are hurting demand.
CURRENCIES: The dollar rose to 110.80 yen from 110.63 yen on Tuesday.
The euro ticked down slightly to $1.1329 from $1.1343.
ENERGY: U.S. benchmark crude shed 43 cents to $56.66 per barrel in
electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, the
standard for international oil prices, lost 56 cents to $65.89 per barrel.The Total Investment & Insurance
Solutions
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