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Italian wine exports rise in North America and Germany amid trade tensions and tariff fears Analysts warn growth may slow as pre-tariff stockpiling ends and domestic demand weakens in Italy due to economic pressures

FYI: Italian wine exports rise in North America and Germany amid trade tensions and tariff fears #ItalianWine #WineExports #TradeTensions #TariffFears #NorthAmerica

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13/16 Swantje Agápe, 57, from San Jose, was planning to retire next year but says things are "too unstable."

Diane Bates, 65, from Washington: "I've been scared since the election that tariffs will cause a recession."
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Stocks Get Another Upgrade on Wall Street as Tariff Fears Fade - Investopedia Stocks Get Another Upgrade on Wall Street as Tariff Fears Fade  Investopedia

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U.K. consumer confidence hits lowest level since 2023 on tariff fears, GfK says Investing.com -- Consumer confidence in the U.K. has fallen to its lowest level in more than a year, as households face rising costs and renewed fears over the economic impact of U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade measures. The GfK consumer confidence index dropped four points to -23 in April, marking the weakest reading since November 2023. The decline reflects the pressure from domestic tax increases, higher household bills, and concerns that Trump’s tariffs could trigger another inflationary wave. Neil Bellamy, consumer insights director at GfK, said consumers had not only been dealing with “multiple April cost increases” in the form of utility bills, council tax, stamp duty and road tax, but were also “hearing dire warnings of renewed high inflation on the back of the Trump tariffs”. Trump’s latest round of tariffs has disrupted the global markets and raised the risk of a broader economic slowdown. While the direct inflationary impact outside the U.S. remains uncertain, disruptions to supply chains could push up prices in the U.K. as well. According to GfK’s data, the measure of expectations for the general economic situation in the next 12 months dropped by eight points to -37, significantly worse than the reading from April 2024. The outlook for personal finances also weakened, falling four points to -3, which is five points lower year-on-year. Falling sentiment levels often signal caution ahead, with households potentially cutting back on major purchases as financial uncertainty grows. U.K. inflation has come down from its late-2022 peak of 11.1% and now stands at 2.6%. However, the Bank of England forecasts a temporary rise to 3.7% this summer before easing toward its 2% target over the next two years. Bellamy raised the possibility that the U.K. could be “on the verge of another round of rapidly increasing prices” tied to the effects of Trump’s trade policies. “If so, consumer confidence is likely to collapse, and the broad gains seen since the disastrous September 2022 mini-budget – when confidence hit a record low of -49 – could quickly be eroded.”

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Nvidia and other chip stocks jump as tariff fears ease - Yahoo Finance Nvidia and other chip stocks jump as tariff fears ease  Yahoo Finance

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Apple (AAPL) Faces 28% EPS Hit Amid Tariff Fears Despite AI Rollout - Yahoo Finance Apple (AAPL) Faces 28% EPS Hit Amid Tariff Fears Despite AI Rollout  Yahoo Finance

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1/8
🚨TRUMP TARIFFS YIELD MARKET TURMOIL🚨

The S&P 500 just posted its worst month since December 2022, plunging 5.8% in March amid escalating fears over Trump's looming tariffs—which investors worry will accelerate inflation, slow consumer spending, and stall growth.
#StockMarket #TariffFears

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Asia stocks rise as tariff fears cool; Australia rises on soft CPI By Investing.com Open in App FLASH SALE FLASH SALE Indices Indices Futures Major Indices Indices Real-Time World Indices Global Indices Dow Jones Futures S&P 500 Futures Nasdaq Futures S&P 500 Dow Jones Nasdaq 100 DAX FTSE 100 Euro Stoxx 50 Nikkei 225 Stocks Stock Screener Trending Stocks United States Pre-Market Earnings Calendar Americas Europe 52 Week High 52 Week Low Most Active Top Gainers Top Losers Undervalued Stocks Overvalued Stocks World ADRs Marijuana Stocks Top Bank Stocks Renewable Energy Stocks Apple Tesla Meta Platforms Amazon.com Microsoft NVIDIA Netflix Pfizer AMD Boeing GameStop Corp AMC Entertainment Nio A ADR Super Micro Computer Commodities Real Time Commodities Metals Energy Grains Softs Meats Commodity Indices Gold Crude Oil WTI Brent Oil Silver Natural Gas Copper US Wheat Cryptocurrency All Cryptocurrencies Cryptocurrency Pairs Bitcoin Ethereum Cardano Solana Dogecoin SHIBA INU Polkadot OFFICIAL TRUMP XRP Currency Converter BTC/USD ETH/USD BCH/USD LTC/USD DOGE/USD ETC/USD ETH/BTC XRP/USD pDOTn/USD Bitcoin Futures CME Currencies Currency Rates Single Currency Crosses Live Currency Cross Rates Exchange Rates Table Forward Rates Currency Futures Currency Options EUR/USD GBP/USD EUR/CHF AUD/USD USD/JPY USD/CAD USD/CHF USD/TRY USD/MXN BTC/USD USD/RUB Dollar Index ETFs World ETFs Major ETFs USA ETFs Marijuana ETFs Bitcoin ETFs SPDR S&P 500 iShares MSCI Emerging Markets SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average Invesco QQQ Trust Funds World Funds Major Funds Vanguard 500 Index Admiral Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund Investor American Funds Capital Income Builder A PIMCO Commodity Real Return Strategy Institutional Bonds US Treasury Yield Curve World Government Bonds Financial Futures Government Bond Spreads Bond Indices Forward Rates World Credit Default Swap Rates (CDS) U.S. 10Y U.S. 30Y U.S. 2Y U.S. 5Y U.S. 3M US 10Y T-Note US 30Y T-Bond Euro Bund Certificates Major Certificates World Certificates SG FTSE MIB Gross TR 5x Daily Short Strategy RT 18 Vontobel 7X Long Fixed Lever on Natural Gas 8.06 BNP Call 500.59 EUR AEX 31Dec99 Stock Markets Earnings Analyst Ratings Transcripts Cryptocurrency Commodities Currencies Economy Economic Indicators Breaking News Pro News Latest Most Popular Sports & General World Politics Press Releases Company News Insider Trading Investment Ideas SEC Filings SWOT Analysis Market Overview Currencies Stock Markets Commodities Bonds Cryptocurrency ETFs Most Popular Editor's Picks Comics Live Charts Currency Chart Futures Chart Stocks Chart Indices Chart Cryptocurrency Chart Interactive Currency Chart Interactive Futures Chart Interactive Indices Chart Interactive Stocks Chart Multiple Currency Charts Multiple Indices Charts Technical Summary Technical Analysis Pivot Points Moving Averages Indicators Candlestick Patterns Candlestick Patterns Fibonacci Calculator Pivot Point Calculator Currency Brokers Stock Brokers Online Brokers Crypto Exchanges Cryptocurrency Brokers Gold IRA Futures Brokers Economic Calendar Holiday Calendar Earnings Calendar Dividend Calendar Splits Calendar IPO Calendar Futures Expiry Calendar Stock Screener Fed Rate Monitor Tool Currency Converter Fibonacci Calculator Currency Correlation Pivot Point Calculator Profit Calculator Margin Calculator Currencies Heat Map Currency Volatility Forward Rates Calculator Mortgage Calculator Master Stocks Master Crypto Master Stock Analysis Unlock Company Statistics Top Stocks Top Dividend Stocks Top Gold ETFs Stock ScreenerEconomic Calendar Prop Trading Stock Prop Trading Firms Alerts Webinars Conferences Trading Guide Central Banks Insights Ad-Free Version Webmaster Tools Broker Blacklist Sentiments Outlook Breaking News Currencies Commodities Stock Markets Economic Indicators Economy Cryptocurrency Insider Trading Company News Earnings Investment Ideas SWOT Analysis Analyst Ratings Transcripts Ambar Warrick Stock Markets ASX 200consumer price index hereremove ads meets next week Hang Seng Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300Shanghai Composite Nikkei 225TOPIX corporate services price index data KOSPI hereremove ads Straits TimesNifty 50 US 30 US 500 Dow Jones S&P 500 Nasdaq S&P 500 VIX Dollar Index Crude Oil WTI Futures Brent Oil Futures Natural Gas Futures Gold Futures Silver Futures Copper Futures US Soybeans Futures U.S. 10Y U.S. 30Y U.S. 5Y U.S. 3M US 10Y T-Note Futures Euro Bund Futures 10-2 Yield Spread AAPL NVDA GOOGL TSLA AMZN NFLX META Bitcoin price today: hovers around $88K after Mt. Gox’s massive BTC transfer Stock market today: S&P 500 closes higher as Tesla leads tech higher All it takes now is $5,000 to buy a stake in a firm like SpaceX or OpenAI Asia stocks rise as tariff fears cool; Australia rises on soft CPI UBS’ Baweja says S&P 500 could hit 5,300 due to ’visibly tiring’ U.S. consumer 1 Stock to Buy, 1 Stock to Sell This Week: Lululemon, Dollar Tree Is the Market Correction Over or Are Investors Facing Another Trap? US Economy Is Slowing, but Recession Risk Remains Low Have Markets Finally Found a Bottom? Is Gold’s Rally Due for a Breather? More News Market Movers Trending Stocks Blog Mobile Portfolio Widgets About Us Advertise Help & Support Authors Terms And Conditions Privacy Policy Risk Warning

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Trading Day: Tariff fears cool, tech sizzles ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - TRADING DAY Nasdaq notches third-biggest rise this year The last full trading week of the quarter got off to a roaring start across most major stock markets on Monday, with investors buoyed by reports that the Trump administration’s tariff blitz scheduled for April 2 may not be as heavy as feared. A solid pick-up in U.S. business activity helped cement the positive tone on Wall Street, and investors bought back some of the shares they’d aggressively sold off recently like Big Tech. Europe ended largely flat, but benchmark Asian, U.S. and global equity indices all rose sharply. Bond yields spiked higher, while ’safe-haven’ gold fell for a third day to clock its longest losing streak since November. All 10 sectors in the S&P 500 rose, led by a 4% surge in consumer cyclicals on hopes that a more targeted approach to tariffs means goods prices won’t rise so much. That was the sector’s biggest rise since November 2022. Some of the biggest individual gainers on Wall Street were in tech, led by a 12% surge in Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA). If trade tensions cool, could investors look at U.S. assets in a more positive light? I’ll dig into broader U.S. capital flows trends below, but first, a round-up of Monday’s markets. Today’s Key Market Moves. * Wall Street’s main three indices and the MSCI World hittwo-week highs. The tech-heavy Nasdaq posts the biggest gain,rallying 2.3%. * Shares in Tesla surge nearly 12%, their biggest risesince November 6, the day after U.S. President Donald Trump’selection win. * Gold continues to drift from its record high, down 0.5%but crucially holding above the $3,000/oz mark. * The yen is the biggest decliner among major currencies.Dollar/yen rises almost 1% to push convincingly back above150.00 to a three-week high of 150.75 yen. * Yields rise across the U.S. Treasury curve, up almost 10basis points at the short end to flatten the curve slightly. Thetwo-year yield registers its biggest rise since January 10. Trade war fears haven’t dissipated completely and the situation remains extremely fluid. While Trump said on Monday he may give a "lot of countries" breaks on tariffs, he still plans to announce more in the next few days on cars, and then on lumber and chips further down the line. And any hopes of inflation relief from less of a blanket approach to tariffs from Washington may be tempered by another rise in oil prices after Trump said he will impose a 25% tariff on countries that buy oil and gas from Venezuela. The price of Brent and WTI crude futures rose more than 1% on Monday to the highest in three weeks. That was the fourth daily increase in a row. If Monday was a slightly more optimistic day for investors regarding global trade tensions, it was less encouraging on the interest rate front. Atlanta Federal Reserve President Raphael Bostic said on Monday he now only sees the central bank delivering one quarter percentage point rate cut this year because he expects inflation won’t come down as quickly as hoped. Bostic had previously expected the Fed would cut rates twice this year. That remains the median view across the Fed’s 19 policymaking officials as last week’s revised projections showed, but the underlying weight of views is shifting. In Asia, meanwhile, details emerged of Beijing’s latest attempts to maintain strong relations with many of the world’s biggest businesses. China’s economy tsar, Vice Premier He Lifeng, met with the heads of Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Pfizer (NYSE:PFE), Mastercard (NYSE:MA), Cargill and others on Sunday. There’s no doubting the huge improvement in investor sentiment towards China following the fiscal and monetary measures announced by Beijing since September, and China’s markets look set to end the quarter on a high note. Foreign demand for U.S. assets might not be dead yet As the first quarter draws to a close, financial markets are at a crossroads. We could be seeing the early stages of a tectonic shift in global investment flows, with a dramatic decline in demand for U.S. assets from abroad. But it’s also possible that this is simply a pause and that the ’U.S. exceptionalism’ narrative has more chapters to go. Net sales of U.S. equities by foreign central banks reached $28 billion in January, and net sales of all U.S. assets by the private sector totaled $74.8 billion, according to official Treasury International Capital flows data. These were, respectively, the fastest-ever pace of U.S. equity selling by the official sector in a single month, and the biggest monthly outflow of U.S. assets by private sector investors in a year. This abrupt reversal in flows goes a long way to explaining the eye-opening underperformance of U.S. stocks against the rest of the world so far this year. This gap has approached 15 percentage points in the past few weeks. Of course, one month does not a trend make, and it will take many more months of similar flows to reverse the tide – or more accurately, the tsunami - of foreign capital that flooded into U.S. markets in recent years. TIC data shows that private sector net capital inflows into U.S. stocks and bonds last year totaled $980 billion, following a net inflow of $668 billion the year before and $1.6 trillion in 2022. That’s net purchases from overseas investors and net selling of foreign assets by U.S. investors. The total figure is worth repeating. In the last three calendar years, private sector investors poured a net $3.25 trillion into U.S. assets. Little wonder that foreign investors at the end of last year owned 18% of U.S. stocks, according to Goldman Sachs. That’s a record-high share going back to 1945. At an average of more than $1 trillion a year, that pace of net inflows was unlikely to be maintained. But does that mean that January’s pace of selling will persist? Not necessarily. PARADIGM SHIFT? Goldman Sachs’ chief U.S. equity strategist David Kostin and his team estimate that foreign investors will remain buyers of U.S. equities this year, lured by the weaker dollar, attractive prices due to the recent correction, and the unparalleled liquidity of U.S. markets. They reckon overseas investors will be just as committed this year as they were last year, buying a net $300 billion compared with $304 billion in 2024. They do note, however, that "elevated political and economic uncertainty also create elevated uncertainty around that forecast." Appetite for U.S. assets will remain strong as long the U.S. maintains an innovation-friendly tax system, flexible financial system, commitment to property rights and a relatively low regulatory burden, agrees Standard Chartered (OTC:SCBFF)’s head of G10 FX strategy Steven Englander. "Cyclical ups and downs in equity and other asset prices would not erase this attractiveness in the long term, even if the correction in U.S. equities continues, provided the underlying positives remain in place," he says. It is important to note that TIC flows reports are released with a lag, meaning January’s outflows don’t account for the notable market shifts seen in recent weeks. The February and March reports could show massive outflows too. There are good reasons why foreign investors have backed away from U.S. assets in recent weeks - stretched valuations, market concentration, the emergence of China’s DeepSeek artificial intelligence model, Germany’s watershed fiscal U-turn, and concern surrounding the Trump administration’s trade and foreign policy agendas. This is all to say it remains unclear whether the recent shift in investment flows is temporary or represents a true paradigm shift. The next few months will be critical. What could move markets tomorrow? * South Korea consumer sentiment (March) * Hong Kong trade (February) * Taiwan industrial production (February) * Bank of Japan minutes from January 23-24 policy meeting * UK inflation (February) * Germany Ifo business sentiment index (March) * U.S. consumer confidence (March) * U.S. 2-year Treasury note auction * U.S. Fed’s Adriana Kugler speaks * U.S. Fed’s John Williams speaks If you have more time to read today, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today. 1. Some European officials weigh if they can rely on Fedfor dollars under Trump 2. Don’t count out a Trump trade détente: Stephen Jen 3. Transatlantic rift might spur euro reserve holdings 4. First-quarter US earnings outlook looks less rosy withtariff worries in focus 5. US retailers haggle with suppliers after Trump tariffs 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.] Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias. Trading Day is also sent by email every weekday morning. Think your friend or colleague should know about us? Forward this newsletter to them. They can also sign up here. (By Jamie McGeever, editing by Nia Williams)

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Stock market shrugs off tariff fears; Sensex, Nifty end over 1 pc higher - Yes Punjab News Sensex surged 740 points, Nifty rebounded 254 points, breaking its 10-day losing streak as US tariff relief hopes lifted investor sentiment.

Stock market shrugs off tariff fears; Sensex, Nifty end over 1 pc higher yespunjab.com?p=99685

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Brent Oil Prices Edge Up Amid U.S. Iran Export Cuts, Tariff Fears Ease ow.ly/F3wW50V0Im3 #BrentOil #OilPrices #IranExports #TariffFears #GlobalOilMarket #USPolicy #EnergyNews #OilIndustry #Economics #MarketTrends

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