BEIJING (AP) — Global stocks sank Wednesday after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened more tariff hikes on Chinese imports if talks aimed at ending a trade war fail to produce an interim agreement.
Market benchmarks in London, Frankfurt, Shanghai and Tokyo declined. Wall Street looked set to slip.
Trump said Tuesday that an agreement on the “Phase 1” deal announced last month “could happen soon.” But he warned he was ready to raise tariffs “very substantially” if that fails.
The two sides disagree publicly about whether the U.S. agreed to roll back some punitive tariffs imposed in the fight over Beijing’s trade surplus and technology ambitions. The Chinese government said last week that was settled, but Trump denied that.
Trump’s comments “served as a reminder of the challenge that the two sides face,” said Jingyi Pan of IG in a report. However, she said, investors saw them as “positioning statements,” reducing their impact.
Latin Kings gang member accused of vandalizing FBI vehicle, stealing government property in Minneapolis
Suspect accused of killing sleeping passenger on Chicago train filmed himself carrying out attack: prosecutors
Noem names Charles Wall ICE deputy director following Sheahan resignation
Tom Homan offers to pull ICE from Minneapolis ‘real quick’ upon access to jails
WATCH: ICE takes down illegal alien who allegedly rammed law enforcement vehicles, nearly running over officer
Trump’s tariffs could be undone by one conservative doctrine: ‘Life or death’
As Trump Contemplates Invoking the Insurrection Act Against Minnesota, Washington’s Example as President Is Instructive
Florida teens buried alive in deadly sand tunnel collapse
Women’s sports on the line as Supreme Court wrestles with defining ‘sex’
Massachusetts town faces lawsuit for allowing criminal immigrant, sex offender to renew business license
Irony Alert: Pro-Illegal Immigration Minneapolis Mayor Says City Has Been ‘Invaded’ by ICE Agents Who Don’t Share Local ‘Values’
EXCLUSIVE: HUD launches civil rights probe into Minneapolis over race-based housing priorities
Renee Good’s Family Hires Legal Team That Represented George Floyd’s Family
17 College Basketball Players Charged with Fixing Games
Biden DHS’s purchase of weapon linked to Havana Syndrome attacks leads House Republicans to demand answers
In midday trading, London’s FTSE 100 declined 0.5% to 7,331 and Frankfurt’s DAX lost 0.7% to 13,186. France’s CAC 40 shed 0.4% to 5,894. On Wall Street, futures for the benchmark Standard & Poor’s 500 index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average were each down 0.4%.
In Asia, the Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.3% to 2,905.24 and Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 sank 0.9% to 23,319.87. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng tumbled 1.8% to 26,571.46.
South Korea’s Kospi retreated 0.9% to 2,122.45 and Australia’s S&P-ASX 200 sank 0.8% at 6,698.40. India’s Sensex lost 0.3% to 40,215.20.
Hong Kong shares, already under pressure from the U.S.-China tariff war and slowing global demand, have been jolted by growing violence in anti-government protests.
The protests began in June over a proposed extradition law and expanded to include demands for greater democracy and other grievances. Hong Kong tumbled into its first recession in a decade in the latest quarter.
Momentum for the global stock market has been mostly upward for more than five weeks as worries about the U.S.-China trade war have eased.
This week, the U.S. Labor Department is due to give updates on consumer and wholesale inflation. Economists expect a government report to show retail sales returned to growth in October.
Latin Kings gang member accused of vandalizing FBI vehicle, stealing government property in Minneapolis
Suspect accused of killing sleeping passenger on Chicago train filmed himself carrying out attack: prosecutors
Noem names Charles Wall ICE deputy director following Sheahan resignation
Tom Homan offers to pull ICE from Minneapolis ‘real quick’ upon access to jails
WATCH: ICE takes down illegal alien who allegedly rammed law enforcement vehicles, nearly running over officer
Trump’s tariffs could be undone by one conservative doctrine: ‘Life or death’
As Trump Contemplates Invoking the Insurrection Act Against Minnesota, Washington’s Example as President Is Instructive
Florida teens buried alive in deadly sand tunnel collapse
Women’s sports on the line as Supreme Court wrestles with defining ‘sex’
Massachusetts town faces lawsuit for allowing criminal immigrant, sex offender to renew business license
Irony Alert: Pro-Illegal Immigration Minneapolis Mayor Says City Has Been ‘Invaded’ by ICE Agents Who Don’t Share Local ‘Values’
EXCLUSIVE: HUD launches civil rights probe into Minneapolis over race-based housing priorities
Renee Good’s Family Hires Legal Team That Represented George Floyd’s Family
17 College Basketball Players Charged with Fixing Games
Biden DHS’s purchase of weapon linked to Havana Syndrome attacks leads House Republicans to demand answers
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is due to give testimony to Congress on Wednesday about the U.S. economy. Most investors expect the Fed to keep interest rates on hold for now after cutting them three times since the summer.
ENERGY: Benchmark U.S. crude lost 37 cents to $56.43 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 6 cents on Tuesday. Brent crude, used to price international oils, shed 60 cents to $61.46 per barrel in London. It retreated 12 cents the previous session.
CURRENCY: The dollar fell to 108.84 Japanese yen from 109.01 yen. The euro dipped to $1.1006 from $1.1010.
Story cited here.









