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Wall Street gains as WH says tariffs will not necessarily spark a trade war

President Donald Trump's tough approach to global trade, including his new tariffs on metals imports, will not necessarily provoke retaliation from trading partners

Reuters 

Wall Street's response to the Fed's tapering plan has so far been muted as a weaker dollar spurs optimism about developing-world assets	 photo: reuters
Photo: Reuters

 

US stocks rose on Thursday, lifted by companies and as industrials moved higher after the said tariffs could be applied without provoking a trade war.

Donald Trump's tough approach to global trade, including his new tariffs on metals imports, will not necessarily provoke retaliation from trading partners, Peter Navarro, the top on economic exchanges, said on CNBC.

"I think the initial reaction to the commentary about trade tariffs, it was very destabilizing to the that the is aware of that and I think they dialed back the rhetoric to an extent," said Peter Kenny, at Advisory Group in

Corporates, especially manufacturers, have been under pressure from Trump's protectionist policies, which recently included an aim to impose tariffs of up to $60 billion on Chinese imports and pressing for $100 billion cut in the China-U.S. trade surplus.

"Prices of equities have become modestly more attractive in the recent days as a result of the compression in prices," said Kenny.

The industrial index was up 0.73 percent, the best performer among the 11 sectors and gaining for the first time in fours sessions.

General Electric, 3M and were up more than 1 percent. Boeing, which investors say may be particularly vulnerable to a trade war, was up a more modest 0.4 percent.

By 11:40 a.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had added 1.12 percent to 25,035.02. The 500 rose 0.38 percent to 2,759.98 and the gained 0.3 percent to 7,519.55.

The also found support from economic data that showed weekly jobless claims fell last week, pointing a strong labor market, while a bigger-than-expected rise in U.S. import prices in February indicated a steady pick up in inflation.

Among stocks, jumped 4.4 percent on report that the Chinese was planning to list in

rose 5.8 percent after the discount retailer's quarterly same-store sales beat estimates, while Sears gained 5 percent reporting a smaller-than-expected drop in same-store sales.

tumbled 5.9 percent to the bottom of the after said the RF chipmaker could lose out to for a spot in upcoming iPhones.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers on the NYSE by 1,423 to 1,346. On the Nasdaq, 1,552 issues rose and 1,238 fell.

First Published: Thu, March 15 2018. 22:39 IST
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