logo
Shares slip as investors look to earnings, tariff talks

Shares slip as investors look to earnings, tariff talks

Reuters12 hours ago
LONDON/SINGAPORE, July 22 (Reuters) - European shares fell on Tuesday, deflated by mixed corporate earnings, while investors took stock of tariff negotiations between the U.S. and its trading partners.
The Euro STOXX 600 index (.STOXX), opens new tab fell 0.4%, with bourses in Germany (.GDAXI), opens new tab and France (.FCHI), opens new tab losing 0.7% and 0.5% respectively.
Chemical stocks (.SX4P), opens new tab declined 1.2%, with Dulux paint maker Akzo Nobel (AKZO.AS), opens new tab losing 1.9% after lowering its core profit outlook for 2025. Earnings from firms including SAP (SAPG.DE), opens new tab and UniCredit (CRDI.MI), opens new tab were also in focus.
Investors were also following tariff talks ahead of Washington's August 1 deadline, with the European Union exploring a broader set of possible countermeasures against the U.S. as hopes for an acceptable agreement fade.
The euro was steady at $1.1689, after rising 0.5% on Monday, but was still away from the near four-year high it touched at the start of the month. The single currency is up 13% this year as investors look for alternatives to U.S. assets bruised by tariff uncertainties.
"The euro's ability to maintain preference over the dollar amid tariff tensions will depend on the extent of any escalation and whether the EU emerges as a relative loser while other countries secure significant deals with the U.S.," ING analysts wrote in a note to clients.
Wall Street futures were flat. The S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab and the Nasdaq (.IXIC), opens new tab closed at record highs on Monday.
Investors are awaiting results this week from Wall Street giants Alphabet and Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab, as well as from European heavyweights LVMH (LVMH.PA), opens new tab, and Roche (ROG.S), opens new tab, as uncertainty over tariffs clouds the outlook.
Earlier, Asian share markets drifted lower after scaling a near four-year peak.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS), opens new tab hit its highest level since October 2021 in early Asian hours but was last down 0.5%. The index is up nearly 16% this year.
Japanese markets returned after a holiday on Monday following the weekend's election where the ruling coalition suffered a defeat in upper house elections, although Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba vowed to remain in his post.
The yen rallied 1% on Monday, recouping some of the losses from past weeks and was last down 0.3% at 147.73 per dollar.
The dollar index , a measure against six other key currencies, was at 97.942.
The rumblings around the Federal Reserve's independence and whether U.S. President Donald Trump will fire Fed Chair Jerome Powell have kept investors on tenterhooks in recent weeks.
Trump appeared near the point of trying to fire Powell last week, but backed off with a nod to the market disruption that would likely follow.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday the entire Federal Reserve needed to be examined as an institution and whether it had been successful, exacerbating concerns about the independence of the U.S. central bank.
The Fed is widely expected to hold rates steady in its July meeting but might lower rates later in the year. Market focus will be squarely on Powell's speech later on Tuesday for clues about when the Fed might ease policy.
In commodities, Brent crude futures fell 0.7% to $68.72 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude slipped 0.8% to $66.68 per barrel.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

We are taking REAL steps to tackle illegal migration that WILL deliver results & ensure fairness for Brits
We are taking REAL steps to tackle illegal migration that WILL deliver results & ensure fairness for Brits

The Sun

time20 minutes ago

  • The Sun

We are taking REAL steps to tackle illegal migration that WILL deliver results & ensure fairness for Brits

WE will stop at nothing to tackle illegal migration. So this week we have delivered a world first: a new sanctions regime to target the vile people-smuggling gangs. The first sanctions are hitting these criminals today. 2 2 We will go after the gang leaders, those supplying boats and fake passports, and the moneymen. Their assets will be frozen. Their bank accounts will be closed. And they will be banned from the UK. For too long, governments have offered nothing but expensive gimmicks – like the Rwanda scheme which achieved precisely zero. Instead, we're taking real, practical steps that will deliver results. We've already returned 35,000 people with no right to be here – way up on the year before. We're working with Germany to close a legal loophole in their system, allowing police to seize small boats being stored and transported in their country. By working with France, we have agreed to a totally unprecedented returns pilot. Now, for the first time, migrants arriving by small boat can be sent back to France. Other governments tried to do this and failed. We're also taking a zero-tolerance approach to the illegal jobs which gangs promise – and which undercut honest businesses. Under our nationwide crackdown, raids and arrests are already up 50%. The Sun has rightly put the spotlight on migrants working illegally as food delivery riders. And we're tackling the problem. A new agreement announced today will see us share asylum accommodation locations with Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats. If a rider is staying at this accommodation, the companies will know and can close down the rider's account. Our message to the gangs is clear. We will be more aggressive than ever to smash your business model and hold you to account. We will do what it takes to uphold the law and to ensure fairness for the British people.

US dollar slumps as Trump's tariff deadline looms
US dollar slumps as Trump's tariff deadline looms

Reuters

time20 minutes ago

  • Reuters

US dollar slumps as Trump's tariff deadline looms

NEW YORK, July 22 (Reuters) - The dollar slid on Tuesday, with the yen one of the major gainers versus the greenback, as investors tracked talks ahead of an August 1 deadline that could bring steep tariffs on products of U.S. trading partners that fail to strike deals. Trading was mostly subdued, with the Japanese currency advancing for a second straight session following results from a weekend upper house election in Japan that had already been priced in. The focus has shifted to how quickly Tokyo can strike a trade deal with Washington as well as on Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's future at the helm. In afternoon trading, the dollar fell 0.5% to 146.54 yen , having fallen more than 1% on Monday following the weekend election and a public holiday. The U.S. currency has retreated for two straight sessions against the yen. With little over a week to go before August 1, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday the administration is more concerned with the quality of trade agreements than their timing. Asked whether the deadline could be extended for countries engaged in productive talks with Washington, Bessent said President Donald Trump would make that decision. "Markets are ... looking through that noise (August 1 tariff deadline) until something actually definitive happens," said Brad Bechtel, global head of FX, at Jefferies in New York. "And a lot of the data has actually been looking okay even with all the tariffs, at least those that have been implemented already." Uncertainty over the eventual state of tariffs globally has been a huge overhang for the foreign exchange market, leaving currencies trading in a tight range for the most part, even as stocks on Wall Street have scaled fresh highs. The dollar index, a gauge of its value against a basket of currencies, slipped 0.3% to 97.545 , having weakened around 0.6% on Monday. It hit a two-week low earlier in the session. The euro edged up 0.2% to $1.1725, with the European Central Bank also in the mix this week for central bank meetings. It is not expected to adjust euro zone interest rates, however. The single currency rose to two-week highs earlier in the global day. A deal between the European Union, which could face 30% tariffs from August 1, and the United States remains elusive. EU diplomats said on Monday they were exploring a broader set of possible counter-measures given fading prospects for an agreement. "The dollar's early-month recovery is running out of momentum, the euro is flat-lining ahead of Thursday's placeholder central bank meeting, and the Japanese yen is consolidating gains achieved after the weekend's better-than-feared election results," said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist, at Corpay in Toronto. "Trading ranges are narrowing against a relatively-quiet data backdrop. Positioning across a range of trading pairs is moving into neutral territory, and gauges of implied volatility are ratcheting lower. " Also weighing on investors' minds were worries about Federal Reserve independence, given Trump has repeatedly railed against Chair Jerome Powell and urged him to resign because of the central bank's reluctance to cut interest rates. Bessent on Monday took a softer stance, saying that there is no need for Powell to step down immediately, adding that he should see through the end of his term in May if he wants. "You can criticize the Fed for many of its policy moves over the years. But pushing the Fed chair out because he won't follow White House instructions is a step too far," wrote Kathy Jones, senior fixed income strategist, at Schwab in a research note. "It will undermine confidence in the central bank at a time when inflation is still too high, and policy is a confusing mix of priorities. If Powell is replaced by someone who is seen as doing the administration's bidding, it would likely lead to a weaker dollar and much higher long-term interest rates."

Indonesia to cut tariffs, non-tariff barriers in US trade deal, Trump official says
Indonesia to cut tariffs, non-tariff barriers in US trade deal, Trump official says

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Indonesia to cut tariffs, non-tariff barriers in US trade deal, Trump official says

July 22 (Reuters) - Indonesia will drop tariffs to zero on more than 99% of its trade with the United States and will also eliminate all non-tariff barriers for American goods in a deal that cuts threatened U.S. tariffs on Indonesian products to 19% from an initial 32%, a senior Trump administration official said on Tuesday. Indonesia will immediately drop its plans to levy tariffs on internet data flows and will support renewal of a longstanding World Trade Organization moratorium on e-commerce duties, the official told reports on a conference call held a week after the deal was first announced on July 15. Indonesia also will remove recently enacted pre-shipment inspection and verifications of U.S. exports, which have posed problems for U.S. agricultural exports and contributed to a growing U.S. farm trade deficit, the official said. In a win for U.S. automakers, the official said that Indonesia has agreed to accept U.S. Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards for vehicles exported from the United States to the growing country of 280 million people. Indonesia also has agreed to remove export restrictions on critical minerals and remove local content requirements products using these commodities shipped to the U.S. ((Reporting by Andrea Shalal and David Lawder in Washington; Editing by Dan Burns)) Keywords: USA TRUMP/TARIFFS INDONESIA

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store