HONG KONG, May 12 — Stocks rallied Monday after Chinese and US officials held “substantial” trade talks and slashed their tit-for-tat tariffs for 90 days, fuelling hopes the two sides will pull back from a standoff that has rattled global markets.
Investors have been on a rollercoaster ride since Donald Trump unveiled eye-watering tolls on trading partners on April 2, with the heftiest saved for Beijing, raising concerns of a trade war between the economic superpowers.
The US president eventually hiked the measures against China to 145 per cent, which were met with retaliatory rates of 125 per cent.
However, there have been signs of an easing of tensions and after two days of highly anticipated negotiations in Geneva, the two countries hailed progress towards ending a crisis that fuelled fears of a global recession.
On Monday the two said they would slash their levies to cool tensions and give officials time to resolve their differences.
In a joint statement the US side said it would reduce tolls to 30 per cent while Chinese tariffs would be cut to 10 per cent.
That came after US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer met Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng and international trade representative Li Chenggang in the first known talks since Trump’s “Liberation Day” announcement.
“We’ve made substantial progress between the United States and China in the very important trade talks,” Bessent told reporters, while the White House has hailed what it called a new “trade deal”.
China’s He said the atmosphere in the talks was “candid, in-depth and constructive”, adding that they were “an important first step”.
Asian markets jumped, with Hong Kong up more than three per cent while Shanghai also enjoyed healthy buying interest.
Tokyo, Sydney, Seoul, Taipei and Wellington were all in the green.
London, Paris and Frankfurt all rose more than one per cent.
US futures surged more than one per cent.
Mumbai jumped more than three per cent after India and Pakistan agreed a ceasefire at the weekend following four days of missile, drone and artillery attacks between the two countries which killed at least 60 people and sent thousands fleeing.
Pakistan’s stock exchange rocketed more than nine per cent.
Oil prices jumped more than three per cent owing to speculation easing China-US tensions would help demand. The dollar also advanced one per cent against the euro and yen.
Gold, which rallied last month over a rush to safe havens, extended losses.
“The initial reaction to the weekend US-China talks (is) predictably encouraging,” said Chris Weston at Pepperstone.
However, Karsten Junius at Bank J. Safra Sarasin was cautious.
“We expect financial markets to remain volatile over the coming months, as they have almost fully priced out negative economic surprises and could once again be disrupted by more serious obstacles in trade negotiations,” he said in a commentary.
“In all likelihood, things may still get worse before they get better.”
Investors are also awaiting the release this week of data on US inflation and retail sales, which will provide a fresh snapshot of the world’s biggest economy since the tariffs were first unveiled. — AFP
Source: Markets rally after China and US slash tariffs for 90 days