Asian markets sink as Trump admits ‘transition cost’ of tariffs – business live | Tariffs

by oqtey
Asian markets sink as Trump admits ‘transition cost’ of tariffs – business live | Tariffs

Nikkei plummets over 5%

Japan’s Nikkei has now tumbled more than 5% while gold hit another record high as continuing tariff jitters hit Asian stocks in early trade on Friday.

The Nikkei 225 benchmark index was off 5.4%, having jumped 9.1% on Thursday after Donald Trump’s 90-day tariff reprieve. Other markets also reversed many of the previous day’s gains, with South Korea’s Kospi in Seoul off 1.64% and, as just posted, Australia down more than 2%.

Oil and the dollar also slid on fears of a global slowdown in economic activity, while gold hit a new record. The yen – another safe-haven asset – also gained 0.9% against the US dollar on Friday.

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Key events

The Australian and New Zealand dollars were looking to end a wild week with sizeable gains on a crumbling US dollar as the damage done to investor confidence by the chaos over tariffs sparked an exodus from US assets.

The gains for the Aussie were all the more startling as it is usually the market’s whipping boy during times of volatility and stress, Reuters reports. Yet this time it was the US dollar being dumped.

President Donald Trump eased back on tariffs for most countries except China on Wednesday in part to stem a sell-off in Treasuries, yet bond yields were rising again on Friday. Yields on US 30-year bonds were heading for their largest weekly increase since 1982.

Indeed, US 10-year yields started the week 19 basis points below those in Australia, but have now swung to paying 10 basis points more, and still the US dollar fell.

The Aussie was last at $0.6219, having rallied from a five-year trough of $0.5910 early in the week. That left it with a gain of 3.1% for the week, the largest since late 2022.

The Australian dollar is set to end this week’s market upheaval with sizeable gains. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP

The kiwi dollar was up at $0.5775, which if held would give it a weekly rise of 3.2%. That was a marked turnaround from a five-year low of $0.5483 hit early in the week, and came despite a cut in local interest rates.

Neither currency fared as well against the major safe havens, however, losing ground to the yen, euro and Swiss franc, in part reflecting the darkening outlook for global growth and resource demand.

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