Trump: Tariffs on European cars and trucks coming into the US will increase to 25% Trump: Not satisfied with the latest Iran proposal, not sure we’re going to get a deal S&P Global Canada manufacturing PMI 53.3 vs 50.0 prior ISM Manufacturing index for April 52,7 vs 53.0…
Trump: Tariffs on European cars and trucks coming into the US will increase to 25% Trump: Not satisfied with the latest Iran proposal, not sure we’re going to get a deal S&P Global Canada manufacturing PMI 53.3 vs 50.0 prior ISM Manufacturing index for April 52,7 vs 53.0 estimate Trump notified Congressional leaders today that US hostilities with Tehran are over Trump serves up a huge opportunity for the EU by raising auto tariffs Fed’s Logan: Fed should not give guidance implying easing right now US S&P Global manufacturing PMI for April 54.5 versus 52.3 last month Iran submitted its newest negotiation proposal — Iran state media BOE chief economist Pill says choosing to hold on rates is not a passive choice Markets: S&P 500 up 0.3% Gold down $7 to $4615 US 10-year yields down 1.8 bps to 4.37% WTI crude oil down $2.68 to $102.68 USD leads, JPY lags It’s Friday, so there is the usual angst about Trump escalating the Middle East war. That led to some late selling in equities and some buying in oil but the tale of the tape shows that the bulls won.
Stocks still finished at record highs and oil was lower. We learned the Iran presented a new offer late yesterday (around the time the market went parabolic) but Trump said that he didn’t like the new offer. Of course, Trump is tough to read and that doesn’t mean bombs will be flying.
Still, it’s always a few anxious hours after the close given the events of the past 10 weeks. Generally, there was a continuation of Thursday’s risk-positive/war-negative market moves into the start of the US session that faded later. The euro move was particularly stark as it rose to 1.1780 and then fell to 1.1714.