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Wall Street recovers from sharp losses sparked by China tariffs

Reuters 

By Sruthi Shankar

(Reuters) - U.S. stocks were marginally higher in afternoon trading on Wednesday, recovering from a steep drop at the start of the session on fears of a deepening trade conflict between the and

hit back against U.S. plans to impose tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods, retaliating with a list of similar duties on key American imports including soybeans, planes, cars, beef and But products, from cellphones to personal computers, were largely exempt.

There also may be room for negotiations as has a two-month window for public comment and consultation, and the market also seemed to take comfort that the effective date of China's moves depends on when the U.S. action takes effect.

rejected the notion that the tit-for-tat moves amounted to a trade war and his top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, and U.S. both held out the possibility of talks to resolve the matter.

Most traders said the initial slide - the Dow Industrials had fallen as much as 2.12 percent, the 1.56 percent and the 1.86 percent - was an over-reaction.

"At the very beginning, the reaction was what we fear, 'It's a tit-for-tat and does that escalate?'," said Art Hogan, at in

"The market has stepped back. The good is didn't escalate the retaliation. They came back dollar for dollar and that's fair and balanced, that's a reciprocal response."

The opened below its 200-day moving average, a key technical level, but inched above as the session progressed, and by afternoon was in positive territory, joined by the

The Dow remained lower for the day, weighed down by and and other industrials, but was well off its session low of a more-than-500 point drop.

At 12:35 p.m. ET, the was down 32.27 points, or 0.13 percent at 24,001.09.

The was higher by 0.11 percent at 2,617.25 and the Composite gained 0.36 percent at 6,966.04.

Boeing, the single largest U.S. exporter to China, was down 2 percent and was 1 percent lower, leading the 0.86 percent drop among industrials.

But companies erased their losses to trade flat, helped by entering positive territory.

After steep drops right from premarket, Ford, and reversed course to trade higher by 0.7 percent to 4.7 percent.

China's tariffs on U.S. soybean led to bets that higher domestic reserves would lower for meat producers such as Tyson Foods, Hormel, and Pilgrim's Pride, which gained 1-5 percent.

jumped 7.6 percent to lead the gainers on the after the homebuilder reported quarterly revenue that beat estimates as it sold more homes at higher prices.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers for a 1.07-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and for a 1.51-to-1 ratio on the

(Reporting by in Bengaluru; Editing by and Patrick Graham)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 04 2018. 22:56 IST
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