Keep knowledgeable with free updates
Merely signal as much as the Equities myFT Digest — delivered on to your inbox.
World markets tumbled on Monday over fears of an escalating commerce conflict forward of Donald Trump’s anticipated unveiling of a swath of recent tariffs this week.
Asian and European stocks fell sharply alongside US futures, accelerating a sell-off that started final week, after Trump mentioned that the reciprocal US duties he’s anticipated to announce on April 2 would apply globally.
“You’d begin with all international locations, so let’s see what occurs,” Trump instructed reporters on Air Power One on Sunday. Final week he had hinted at concessions for some international locations.
The US president singled out Asia for its commerce practices. “Check out commerce with Asia. I wouldn’t say anyone has handled us pretty,” he mentioned.
The chaotic rollout of Trump’s aggressive commerce agenda has roiled markets and alarmed the US’s buying and selling companions, a lot of whom have threatened to retaliate.
The US president has mentioned that on Wednesday, which he has dubbed “liberation day”, he’ll impose levies on any nation the White Home deems to have an unfair buying and selling relationship with the US.

Europe’s broad-based Stoxx 600 index dropped 1 per cent in early buying and selling, whereas the FTSE 100 misplaced 0.8 per cent.
“We’re seeing one other wave of US-led promoting,” mentioned Trevor Greetham, head of multi-asset at Royal London Asset Administration, including that “there’s been no let-up from Trump”.
Charles De Boissezon, world head of fairness technique at Société Générale, added that cyclical shares, whose efficiency tends to fluctuate with the financial system, are struggling.
“It’s rather more the uncertainty total weighing on investor sentiment,” he mentioned.
“The [tariff] bulletins carry on altering, however what they’ve in frequent is that it’s simply not good for development globally,” he added.
Japan’s benchmark Topix dropped 3.3 per cent and the exporter-oriented Nikkei 225 slid 3.9 per cent. In Taiwan, the Taiex shed 4.2 per cent, whereas South Korea’s Kospi fell 3 per cent. Hong Kong’s Dangle Seng retreated 1.6 per cent.

Futures markets pointed to continued falls within the US, with contracts monitoring the Nasdaq 100 down 1.3 per cent and the S&P 500 down 0.8 per cent.
Chipmakers from the area have been among the many greatest losers, with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Firm and Samsung Electronics dropping 4.4 per cent and three.5 per cent respectively. Japan’s Disco, a maker of instruments for chip manufacturing, declined greater than 8 per cent.
In Hong Kong, Tencent and Alibaba fell 1.5 per cent and a couple of per cent respectively.
Gold surged to a file $3,128 a troy ounce, whereas US Treasury yields declined in an indication that buyers have been piling into secure belongings. The ten-year US Treasury yield fell 0.06 proportion factors to 4.2 per cent.
“Many buyers are [waiting] for precise tariffs to be introduced, unwinding their positions and realising features,” mentioned Wei Li, head of multi-asset investments for BNP Paribas in China. “This tariff announcement . . . has affected the entire market sentiment.”
In foreign money markets, the yen strengthened 0.6 per cent towards the greenback to ¥148.9, whereas the offshore renminbi strengthened 0.2 per cent to 7.26 a greenback. The US greenback edged down 0.2 per cent towards a basket of key buying and selling companions’ currencies.
The actions in Asia got here after falls on Friday within the US, the place the S&P 500 dropped 2 per cent. The tech-focused Nasdaq Composite slid 2.7 per cent as gloomy data on the economy and client sentiment raised fears about stagflation.