Business
Wall Street Wobbles Despite Strong Bank Earnings Amid Escalating U.S.-China Trade War
U.S. stock markets remained volatile on Friday as investor sentiment soured, despite better-than-expected earnings reports from major banks including JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo. The turbulence came amid heightened fears over the deepening trade war between the United States and China, and a flurry of unsettling signals from global financial markets.
The S&P 500 fell 0.4% in early trading, continuing its downward trend following Wednesday’s sharp rally after President Donald Trump announced a temporary pause on certain tariffs for countries outside of China. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 232 points, or 0.6%, while the Nasdaq composite slipped 0.1% as of mid-afternoon trading.
However, these modest losses may not hold steady, with markets showing increased sensitivity to geopolitical developments. “Stock prices have been fluctuating by the hour,” noted one market analyst, “and investors are struggling to forecast the long-term impact of escalating trade tensions.”
The latest trigger came after China announced it would raise tariffs on U.S. goods to as high as 125%, in retaliation for Washington’s recent hike of tariffs to the same level. In a sharp statement, China’s Finance Ministry dismissed the tit-for-tat measures as economically futile, calling them “a joke in the history of the world economy,” but vowed to retaliate if U.S. actions continued to undermine its interests.
Amid rising uncertainty, gold surged more than 2% to $3,250 per ounce, as investors turned to the traditional safe-haven asset. Conversely, the U.S. dollar weakened against major currencies including the euro, Japanese yen, and Canadian dollar—an unusual divergence in crisis behavior.
U.S. Treasury markets also saw significant movement. The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped to 4.50% from 4.40% a day earlier and 4.01% last week, as prices for the bonds fell. Analysts believe global investors may be offloading U.S. government debt due to the trade war, pushing yields higher and exerting additional pressure on borrowing costs for consumers and businesses.
Despite the gloom, major U.S. banks delivered upbeat quarterly earnings. JPMorgan Chase exceeded forecasts and saw its shares rise 1.6%, while Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo also posted stronger-than-expected profits. However, the latter two saw mixed stock reactions, with Morgan Stanley edging down 0.2% and Wells Fargo dropping 3%.
Even a promising inflation report—showing a lower-than-expected rise in wholesale prices in March—failed to lift market sentiment. While the report could give the Federal Reserve more flexibility to cut interest rates in the future, many investors remain focused on the longer-term inflation risks posed by the ongoing tariff battle.
Global markets reflected the uncertainty. Germany’s DAX declined 1.6%, while London’s FTSE 100 rose 0.3% following signs of economic growth in February. In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 tumbled 3%, whereas Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gained 1.1%.
As Wall Street closes the week, markets remain jittery with no clear end in sight to the trade hostilities between the world’s two largest economies.
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Goldman Sachs Warns Europe Faces Economic Strain as China’s Export Push Intensifies
China’s strengthening export momentum is emerging as a significant threat to Europe’s economic outlook, with Goldman Sachs cautioning that major EU economies could face notable GDP losses as Beijing doubles down on an export-led recovery strategy. The investment bank has cut its eurozone growth forecasts, warning that Europe is increasingly exposed to rising global trade competition at a time of limited policy flexibility.
Giovanni Pierdomenico, an economist at Goldman Sachs, said the euro area is “particularly exposed” to the impact of increased Chinese goods supply, which risks widening the region’s growing trade deficit with China and undermining its already weakened competitive position. The bank estimates that stronger Chinese export competition will reduce eurozone GDP by about 0.5% by the end of 2029.
Germany is projected to face the heaviest hit, with real GDP expected to be 0.9% lower over the next four years due to pressure from Chinese exports. Italy is forecast to see a 0.6% impact, while France and Spain are each expected to register declines of around 0.4%.
Goldman analysts point to a sharp shift in global market dynamics: in the past five years, eurozone exporters have lost as much as four percentage points of market share to Chinese firms across major global markets. The bank estimates that for every one-dollar increase in Chinese exports, European exports typically fall between twenty and thirty cents, illustrating the scale of substitution taking place. This trend, analysts say, is steadily eroding Europe’s competitive edge.
European policymakers have announced a series of measures aimed at strengthening strategic resilience, including the Critical Raw Materials Act and the AI Continent Action Plan. But Goldman Sachs remains doubtful that these initiatives will be enough to counter China’s export dominance. Analyst Filippo Taddei notes that the EU’s response is constrained by structural vulnerabilities — particularly its heavy reliance on China for key components and raw materials.
Goldman warns that while selective action against certain Chinese products is possible, broader restrictions could disrupt supply chains central to Europe’s industrial activity. At the same time, the bank highlights that many EU programmes intended to shore up competitiveness remain underfunded relative to their ambitions.
Defence is the only sector where Europe has committed substantial financial resources, with the Readiness 2030 programme backed by €150 billion in loans under the Security Action for Europe scheme. Even this effort, however, relies on Chinese supplies of rare earth elements essential for advanced military systems.
The bank concludes that without a more unified and assertive industrial strategy, Europe risks losing further ground in global markets it once dominated. Policymakers now face difficult decisions over how to reinforce Europe’s industrial base while managing its dependence on Chinese inputs — and how long the region can rely on fiscal support and consumer strength to cushion its economy against mounting external pressures.
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