Trump's Tariff Delay Lifts Wall Street

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2019-08-14 HKT 07:27

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  • Traders have had a rare optimistic sign for the Sino-US trade spat. Photo: AP

    Traders have had a rare optimistic sign for the Sino-US trade spat. Photo: AP

US markets have rallied after President Donald Trump delayed tariffs on key Chinese goods, a shift from recent escalations in the long-running dispute between Washington and Beijing.

The Dow Jones finished up 1.4 percent at 26,279. The broad-based S&P 500 rose 1.5 percent to 2,926, while the Nasdaq jumped 2.0 percent to 8,016.

Stocks surged after Washington pushed back imposition of the 10 percent tariffs until December 15 for Chinese-made electronics, including items popular with holiday shoppers like cell phones, laptops and video game systems.

And news that top US and Chinese trade officials spoke by telephone early Tuesday offered further signs of a possible letup in the trade war that had been escalating in recent weeks.

The tariff announcement "is very positive," said Alan Skrainka of Cornerstone Wealth Management. "It's showing us a thaw in what has been very icy negotiations."

But Washington will proceed with tariffs on a host of other products starting September 1.

The stock rally was led by companies that had fallen the most after the initial tariff announcement, including toymakers, apparel companies and retailers.

Shares of Apple surged 4.2 percent, while electronics retailer Best Buy jumped 6.5 percent. Nike won 2.1 percent, Ralph Lauren 1.6 percent and toymaker Hasbro 2.8 percent. Toys and clothing also got a reprieve from the tariffs.

Sam Stovall of CFRA Research said the delay was positive, but the market reaction showed investors were still edgy.

"One tweet makes investors go from overly bearish to overly enthusiastic," Stovall said. "It indicates to me that this market is fragile and susceptible to any changes in news."

Trump threatened later Tuesday to pull out of the World Trade Organisation, a signal that more trade-related volatility could be ahead.

He has made the WTO the target of many previous attacks, and threatened before to withdraw, claiming unfair treatment toward the US and saying Washington does not have to abide by WTO rulings.

Also of concern is burgeoning civil unrest in Hong Kong, where protests affected services for the second day in a row. (AFP)

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