Stocks, dollar gain on US-China trade talks, detail needed


By Wayne Cole

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Wall Street stock futures jumped and the dollar firmed against safe haven peers on Monday as signs of progress in U.S.-China trade talks boosted hopes a global recession might be avoided, though details of any deal were still to come.

Geopolitical tensions also looked to be easing as a fragile ceasefire held between India and Pakistan, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he was ready to meet Vladimir Putin in Turkey on Thursday for talks.

Over in Geneva, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent touted “substantial progress” in trade discussions, while Chinese officials said the sides had reached “important consensus” and agreed to launch another new economic dialogue forum.

“What we seem to have here, then, is a broad framework under which the two nations can conduct further talks, with the aim of reaching a broader trade agreement,” said Michael Brown, a senior research strategist at Pepperstone.

“Not the worst case outcome that was possible from this weekend’s talks, far from it, but not a concrete deal either,” he added. “Does this progress allow for any tariffs to be paused, reduced, or rolled back, and if so for how long?”

Investors are hoping the White House will soon scale back the 145% tariff on Chinese goods, even if only back to the 60% first flagged by President Donald Trump.

Trump still seems wedded to keeping broad tariffs in place no matter what, which will drag on economic growth and push up prices, but any trade progress could help dodge a downturn.

Markets reacted by pushing S&P 500 futures up 1.1%, while Nasdaq futures rose 1.4%.

Nikkei futures gained 1.3% and pointed to a similar rise for the Nikkei when it opens.

The dollar added 0.4% on the safe haven yen to reach 145.90, though it was off an early five-week peak of 146.31. The euro dipped 0.2% to $1.1224 and the dollar index edged up 0.2% to 100.60.

A FRUGAL FED

Trump’s erratic trade policies have put the dollar under pressure in recent weeks, though it gained some support last week when the Federal Reserve signalled it was in no rush to cut interest rates again.

Data on U.S. consumer prices for April due this week could offer an early hint of the impact of import levies on inflation, while retail sales are seen falling back in April after a pre-tariff surge the month before.

“We expect it will not be until the May CPI data are out before we see broad evidence of tariffs showing up in inflation data,” analysts at ANZ wrote in a note.

“In this regard, we think June is too early for the Fed to cut rates and maintain our view that Q3, and most probably September, is a more realistic time frame,” they added. “That would give the opportunity to observe the impact of higher tariffs on both the price level and inflation persistence.”

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