by Andre Janse van Vuuren and Anand Krishnamoorthy
US stock futures dipped to extend days of fluctuations as traders grapple with a fog of uncertainty surrounding the global trade war.
S&P 500 contracts slid 0.5% as the US benchmark is set to continue a run of daily swings between gains and losses. European stocks fell. The dollar rose 0.2% as US Treasuries edged higher, with the 10-year yield declining two basis points to 4.42%.
Two months after President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff announcements and push for new trade deals, there are few signs of a breakthrough in talks with either China or the European Union — the biggest US trading partners. At the same time, the economy has increasingly shown signs of a moderate yet broad-based softening.
The White House on Monday sought to push ahead with efforts to arrange a call between Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, but representatives of the Chinese leader have yet to reciprocate interest.
“We’re clearly seeing a lot of volatility and investors want more visibility,” Massimiliano Bondurri, founder and chief executive officer of SGMC Capital in Singapore, said on Bloomberg TV. “It’s normal that markets are actually going to be flip-flopping.”
Meanwhile, Trump worked the phones Monday and took to social media to try to sway Republican holdouts on his multi-trillion dollar tax bill. Investors and traders have raised concern that the legislation could worsen a ballooning budget deficit and US debt pile.
In Europe, investors’ attention will turn to inflation data for the euro zone due later on Tuesday. Annual price growth is anticipated to hit 2% for the first time in seven months after reports showing weakening in the region’s four biggest economies.
Money markets are all but certain of a 25 basis point cut when the European Central Bank delivers its policy decision on Thursday, with at least one additional reduction expected later this year.
Corporate Highlights:
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
Currencies
Cryptocurrencies
Bonds
Commodities
This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
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