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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6827.42
6827.42
6827.42
6899.86
6801.80
-73.58
-1.07%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
48458.04
48458.04
48458.04
48886.86
48334.10
-245.98
-0.51%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23195.16
23195.16
23195.16
23554.89
23094.51
-398.69
-1.69%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
97.950
98.030
97.950
98.500
97.950
-0.370
-0.38%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.17394
1.17409
1.17394
1.17496
1.17192
+0.00011
+ 0.01%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33707
1.33732
1.33707
1.33997
1.33419
-0.00148
-0.11%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4299.39
4299.39
4299.39
4353.41
4257.10
+20.10
+ 0.47%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
57.233
57.485
57.233
58.011
56.969
-0.408
-0.71%
--

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Incoming Czech Prime Minister Babis: Czech Republic Will Not Take On Guarantees For Ukraine Financing, European Commission Must Find Alternatives

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          Q1 Gold Demand Explodes; Investors Rush To Safety As Global Uncertainty Mounts

          Patricia Franklin

          Commodity

          Economic

          Summary:

          A new paradigm of economic risk and uncertainty has propelled physical demand for gold as the precious metal sees its best start to the year since 2016, according to the latest report from the World Gold Council.

          Q1 Gold Demand Explodes; Investors Rush To Safety As Global Uncertainty Mounts_1

          A new paradigm of economic risk and uncertainty has propelled physical demand for gold as the precious metal sees its best start to the year since 2016, according to the latest report from the World Gold Council.

          Global gold consumption increased to 1,206 tonnes in the first three months of the year, up 1% from the first quarter of 2025, the WGC said in its quarterly Gold Demand Trends report, published Wednesday.

          Q1 Gold Demand Explodes; Investors Rush To Safety As Global Uncertainty Mounts_2

          In an interview, Joseph Cavatoni, Senior Market Strategist at the World Gold Council, said that the latest data show three robust pillars of support as retail investors continue to buy physical bars and coins, along with a renewed appetite for gold-backed exchange-traded funds.

          At the same time, central banks continue to buy gold and diversify their official foreign reserves.

          Cavatoni said that the U.S. government’s plan to usher in a new structure in global trade with tariffs on imported goods is creating a lot of uncertainty, which is forcing investors, portfolio managers, and central banks to reassess how they balance out risks in their portfolios.

          He noted that frothy risk assets and precarious debt levels are even causing some to question the reliability of U.S. Treasuries.

          “ Banks are no longer taking risk capital and putting it to work. I think risk assets move in tandem a lot more likely than they have in the past. And a lot more severely than they have in the past,” he said. “U.S. Treasuries are also being looked at differently than they have in the past. This leaves people trying to find that balance in their portfolios and they are turning to gold.”

          Cavatoni also noted that investment demand has also become broad-based, with both Western and Eastern consumers looking for ounces.

          “We continue to see natural ebbs and flows in the price, but we're staying at these elevated levels,” he said. “This is telling us that this is fundamental buying as opposed to just pure push and pull of speculation. Because of this uncertainty in markets, the case remains strong for us to see gold continuing to be consumed on a very, very large scale, both among investors and central banks.”

          Investors flooding back into gold-backed ETFs

          While unprecedented gold demand has been driving prices to record highs for the last year, one important segment of the marketplace has been missing, until now.

          Investor demand for gold-backed exchange-traded funds has been lackluster, to say the least, in the last few years; however, demand has picked up significantly since January.

          According to data from the WGC, 226.5 tonnes of gold flowed into global gold-backed ETFs in the first three months of the year, a sharp contrast to 113 tonnes in outflows reported in the first quarter of 2024.

          At the same time, bullion bar and coin demand increased to 325.4 tonnes, up 3% from 317.3 tonnes reported last year.

          “Global gold-backed ETFs witnessed a broad-based revival, with investors from across the world adding significantly to their holdings. This has been replicated in investment interest for gold bars and coins, with very few markets witnessing a decline in holdings,” the analysts said in the report.

          A new trend emerging in the gold ETF market is that Asian investors are becoming more active, and Cavatoni noted that in the last month, Chinese demand has surpassed North American ETF inflows.

          Cavatoni said that it is difficult to see investment demand souring anytime soon. He added that even if geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty eased, “the genie is out of the bottle” and it will take time to repair damaged relationships and rebuild trust among allies.

          “ It's hard to find a scenario that takes gold prices sharply lower,” he said. “ Strategic allocations for the purposes of mitigating risk and uncertainty remain super strong. Investors aren’t necessarily looking at the price and saying, ‘At $3,000, that's too expensive for me.’ They are taking a step back, looking at the broader picture, and seeing gold as a component of their portfolio. I see this as a case for gold prices to be well-supported at these levels.”

          Central bank demand off to a slow start

          Along with robust investment demand, the WGC says central bank purchases remain a solid pillar in the marketplace, albeit demand has slowed from the record pace set last year.

          Q1 Gold Demand Explodes; Investors Rush To Safety As Global Uncertainty Mounts_3

          According to the data, central banks bought 243.7 tonnes of gold between January and March, down 21% from the 309.9 tonnes bought last year.

          “While this demand was markedly lower than the previous quarter, in absolute terms it was still healthy at 24% above the five-year quarterly average, and just 9% below the average seen over the last three years of very elevated demand,” the analysts said. “The overall buying trend is now entering its sixteenth year, fresh off the back of colossal buying in the last three years. But what’s next for central bank gold demand? We anticipate that heightened levels of uncertainty will maintain gold’s role as a valuable component of international reserves going forward, and this will support demand in the near term.”

          Although the spotlight in the gold market is shining on investment demand and central bank purchases, Cavatoni said that the tech sector is an unsung hero in the marketplace.

          The report said that industrial demand consumed 80.5 tonnes of gold in the first quarter, roughly unchanged from last year.

          Cavatoni said that with so much uncertainty in the global economy, stable tech demand could be seen as a good sign that the economy is more resilient than some might expect.

          “This tells us that demand for high-end consumables remains relatively stable. Consumers are not swapping out their purchases just yet,” he said.

          Jewelry demand weakens in Q1

          While the gold market has been firing on all cylinders in the first three months of the year, there is one weak pillar in the marketplace.

          The WGC said that jewelry consumption was sharply weaker in the first quarter, with global demand falling to 380.3 tonnes, a decline of 21% compared to last year.

          Cavatoni said that the decline is not surprising, as consumers couldn’t compete with higher prices. According to the report, demand fell to its lowest level since the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic when the global economy shut down.

          “Record gold prices dictated global trends in gold jewellery demand in the first quarter,” the WGC said in the report.

          The report noted that Chinese jewelry demand was extremely weak in the first quarter, with purchases falling 35% compared to last year.

          “Record gold prices at a time of sluggish income growth and a shift towards pure gold investment products drove a sharp decline in China,” the analysts said. “As the price continued to set new record highs, consumers preferred to sit on the sidelines and/or to shift to lighter-weight, more affordable items.”

          Although jewelry demand has struggled in recent months, Cavatoni said that he expects demand to come back if prices stabilize. He explained that volatility, rather than higher prices, spooks consumers.

          The WGC report shows that it’s not just investors who have benefited from higher gold prices. The report said that mine supply increased to 856 tonnes, up 1% from 2024.

          “Total gold supply increased by 1% y/y to 1,206t in the first quarter. This was driven by record mine production of 856t – an all-time Q1 high in our data series, which dates back to 2000 – and despite a 1% y/y decline in recycling to 345t,” the analysts said.

          Source: Kitco

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Global Investors Seek Tariff-Safe Havens As Wall Street Exodus Sparks Rotation Into Niche Markets

          Gerik

          Economic

          Flight From Wall Street Fuels A Hunt For New Safe Zones

          Global investors are pivoting away from traditional U.S. assets in search of “tariff-proof” alternatives, as Wall Street reels from President Donald Trump’s unpredictable economic policy shifts. Since his early April tariff announcement, U.S. stocks have suffered their third consecutive monthly loss, and the dollar has fallen to a three-year low. While European equities initially appeared to be the main beneficiary of this capital outflow, the recent 10% surge in the euro has reversed that trend by undermining the region’s export competitiveness.
          As the euro’s appreciation exacerbates the trade damage already triggered by Trump’s protectionist stance, global portfolio managers are reallocating toward markets and assets that were previously considered too volatile. In a reversal of conventional risk assumptions, regions like Latin America and sectors like gold mining are now drawing fresh capital.

          From Chaos To Commodity: Niche Markets Emerge As Beneficiaries

          With the U.S. economy shaken by both protectionist tariffs and fiscal uncertainty, capital has flooded into unconventional havens. Pictet Asset Management’s Shaniel Ramjee, for example, has turned to Brazilian local currency debt and gold mining shares in Australia and Canada. These plays offer both dollar hedging and relative insulation from direct tariff shocks.
          Similarly, Principal Asset Management’s Mike Goosay has emphasized opportunities in securitized debt, private credit, and emerging market bonds—assets that, under normal conditions, would rank higher on the volatility scale. But with traditional safe havens like U.S. Treasuries now caught in the policy crossfire, investors are recalibrating risk perceptions.

          Emerging Markets Outperform As Wall Street And Europe Lag

          Market data reflects this reallocation in real time. Mexican stocks have surged nearly 14% in April, and a Latin American currency index is now up 12% year-to-date. Investors appear to be betting that regions less directly entangled in U.S.-China trade frictions—or better positioned diplomatically, like India—may offer more stable ground.
          India, in particular, has garnered praise for improving trade ties with the U.S. despite geopolitical tensions elsewhere, while Saudi stocks have gained 6% in three weeks following U.S. tariffs on oil. Investors are also eyeing China, where optimism about government stimulus has lifted equities by roughly 5% in three weeks, even as broader trust in Chinese economic data remains cautious.

          Havens Under Pressure As Capital Exceeds Capacity

          Yet even safe-haven assets are showing strain under the volume of redirected capital. The Japanese yen has gained over 4% this month, gold briefly hit a record $3,500 per ounce on April 22, and German Bund yields have fallen dramatically relative to U.S. Treasuries. With the supply of high-rated non-U.S. bonds limited, these moves are intensifying valuation risks in what were once viewed as low-risk zones.
          In fact, strategists from Morgan Stanley warn that the euro’s ongoing rise could reinforce Europe’s vulnerability, worsening the export outlook and undermining fragile growth expectations. This feedback loop—of capital inflow driving currency appreciation, which in turn erodes competitiveness—has already halted the earlier European equity rally.

          Strategic Repricing And The Next Market Narrative

          JPMorgan’s recent survey at the IMF/World Bank meetings shows how fragmented investor sentiment has become: with no clear consensus, a quarter of respondents are holding cash, while many others are gravitating toward higher-yielding risk assets in non-core markets.
          Some investors, like Ninety One’s Justin Jewell, believe the current disarray in U.S. policy will be recalibrated within months, potentially setting the stage for renewed U.S. market confidence. Others are skeptical and see prolonged uncertainty as a driver of strategic de-dollarization and structural realignment in global capital allocation.
          Still, analysts across the board agree: the old herding behavior around U.S. assets is over, at least for now. With the dollar discredited by fiscal inconsistency and European assets battered by currency strength, the emerging theme of 2025 may well be tactical agility—finding opportunity in overlooked corners of the market, while the world waits for a clearer signal from Washington.

          Source: Reuters

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          China Accelerates Global Yuan Strategy Amid U.S. Tariff Turmoil And Dollar Uncertainty

          Gerik

          Economic

          China–U.S. Trade War

          China Seizes Trade Disruptions As Strategic Window To Expand Yuan Usage

          Amid the turbulence created by President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariff regime and rising global skepticism toward U.S. economic stability, China is quietly accelerating its long-term ambition to internationalize the yuan. In recent weeks, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has launched a series of initiatives that span from expanding cross-border QR payment networks in Southeast Asia to growing its yuan-denominated swap lines, creating new momentum for its parallel financial architecture.
          Cross-border yuan payments hit a record high in March 2025, and the value of PBOC swap lines surged to 4.3 trillion yuan ($591.2 billion) in February. These developments signal a growing appetite among China's trading partners for alternative settlement mechanisms as dollar-based systems appear increasingly politicized and unstable.

          From Regional Convenience To Strategic Diversification

          On the retail side, China UnionPay—PBOC’s financial services arm—is expanding QR code-based payments in Vietnam and Cambodia. These systems offer small businesses and tourists a frictionless transaction option that bypasses the dollar, reinforcing the yuan’s usability outside China. At the same time, high-level efforts continue to anchor large-scale commodity trades—such as oil and gold—in yuan, including in digital form.
          This dual-pronged approach targets both the micro and macro levels of the global financial system. It builds soft infrastructure for daily commercial transactions while creating hard buffers against dollar liquidity risk for central banks and governments aligned with China or frustrated with U.S. trade unpredictability.

          Tariffs Create Opportunity Amid Dollar Doubt

          Analysts and central bank officials within China are openly linking the yuan’s recent momentum to the growing weaponization of tariffs under Trump’s administration. As Bank of Communications’ E. Yongjian noted, the perception that U.S. assets are no longer politically neutral has undercut confidence in the dollar and catalyzed demand for yuan-based alternatives.
          By contrast, China is promoting the yuan as a reliable currency for settlement, trade, and investment—especially with partners in the Global South. The PBOC is also ramping up support for its proprietary cross-border payment system, CIPS, and pushing for blockchain-based infrastructure supporting digital yuan transactions.

          Challenges To Full Convertibility Remain, But Partial Progress Builds Leverage

          Despite these advances, one structural limitation remains: the yuan is still not freely convertible. China’s closed capital account discourages broader investor holdings and limits the currency’s global uptake as a reserve or transaction medium.
          However, the yuan is gaining traction in specific bilateral and regional contexts where China has deep trade ties. Argentina, for example, recently renewed a $5 billion portion of its yuan swap line, and Pakistan is negotiating to expand its own. These arrangements serve as both liquidity tools and symbols of trust in China’s economic partnership model.

          Geopolitical Realignment As Catalyst For Monetary Evolution

          The current geopolitical climate, characterized by rising protectionism and fragmented trade alliances, creates a structural opening for the yuan’s global role to grow. Chinese policymakers and state-linked researchers are framing this moment as an “east rising, west declining” shift in the international order.
          While the dollar still dominates—with nearly 50% of global payments and over 80% of trade financing—yuan usage now ranks fourth globally at 4%, according to SWIFT. Analysts agree that the euro is likely to absorb more of the dollar’s lost ground in the near term, but the yuan’s steady inroads—especially via swap lines and trade-based payments—signal durable potential in emerging markets.

          A Parallel System, Not A Replacement—For Now

          China is not trying to dethrone the dollar overnight. Instead, it is building a parallel financial network—gradual, functional, and increasingly attractive to trade partners wary of U.S. volatility. As Trump’s trade actions rattle traditional supply chains and financial relationships, China is positioning the yuan as a politically neutral, technologically advanced, and trade-relevant currency.
          If global confidence in U.S. monetary leadership continues to erode, China’s groundwork today may yield significant long-term returns. In the words of Renmin University’s Tu Yonghong, “The U.S.-dominated system is growing fragile. China should grasp this good opportunity.”

          Source: Reuters

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Australia’s Inflation Holds At 2.4% As RBA Eyes Room For Rate Cuts Ahead Of May Election

          Gerik

          Economic

          Inflation Stabilizes At Four-Year Low, Strengthening Monetary Policy Flexibility

          Australia’s consumer price index (CPI) rose 2.4% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2025, unchanged from the previous quarter and remaining at a four-year low. This print came in slightly above Reuters’ consensus forecast of 2.3%, but still firmly within the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) 2–3% target range.
          The inflation data, released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, signals continued disinflationary momentum after a peak of 7.8% in Q4 2022. The softening trend has now persisted through seven of the last nine quarters, reflecting easing cost pressures across major sectors.

          Sectoral Breakdown Highlights Mixed Price Movements

          The most notable quarterly price increases came from the housing, education, and food and non-alcoholic beverage categories—sectors often influenced by cyclical factors and supply chain adjustments. Conversely, prices declined in recreation and culture, as well as furnishings and household services, partially offsetting overall upward pressure.
          This sectoral divergence suggests that inflationary pressures are becoming more localized and less systemic, a positive development for the central bank’s policy outlook. It also supports the notion that headline inflation is being anchored more by fundamentals than by commodity-driven shocks or global supply disruptions.

          Core Inflation Offers Clearer Signal For RBA Policy

          The RBA’s preferred measure of underlying inflation—the trimmed mean CPI—rose 0.7% quarter-on-quarter and 2.9% year-on-year. This places core inflation comfortably within the target range, giving the central bank greater policy flexibility.
          Sean Langcake of Oxford Economics emphasized that the trimmed mean performance enhances the case for monetary easing, noting that the RBA now “has greater scope to help support the economy through this coming shock.” His forecast includes a 25-basis point rate cut in May, followed by two additional cuts in the second half of 2025.
          The RBA has already trimmed its benchmark rate from 4.35% to 4.1%, reversing a tightening cycle that began amid the 2022 inflation peak. While policy remains restrictive relative to pre-pandemic norms, the declining inflation trajectory opens space for further stimulus.

          Election Looms As Economic Policy Becomes Central Focus

          The inflation release arrives just days before Australia’s federal election on May 3. All 150 House of Representatives seats and 40 Senate seats are in play, with economic management a key campaign theme.
          According to a Newspoll survey cited by Reuters, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor Party holds a four-point lead over the opposition Liberal-National Coalition when adjusted for preference flows. With cost-of-living concerns still top-of-mind for voters, steady inflation figures may support the incumbent’s fiscal and monetary policy positions.

          Outlook: Growth, Labor Stability, But Global Headwinds Persist

          The RBA maintains a cautiously optimistic outlook for 2025, expecting stronger domestic growth and a resilient labor market. However, global uncertainty—particularly from trade disruptions, geopolitical risks, and capital market volatility—continues to cloud the external environment.
          The combination of subdued inflation and solid labor conditions provides the RBA with a rare policy window: to ease rates in support of growth without stoking price instability. Whether the central bank acts swiftly or proceeds with gradual easing will depend on upcoming data releases, including labor market trends, household consumption, and global financial conditions.

          Source: CNBC

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          China Quietly Rolls Out Tariff Exemption List For U.S. Goods As Trade War Softens Behind The Scenes

          Gerik

          China–U.S. Trade War

          Behind-The-Scenes Diplomacy: China’s Tariff Exemption Strategy Emerges

          Amid intensifying trade friction with the United States, China has begun quietly notifying select companies of a confidential list of U.S.-made goods that will be exempt from its 125% retaliatory tariffs. This strategic, under-the-radar move—confirmed by multiple industry sources—illustrates how Beijing is pursuing a two-track approach: maintaining a tough public posture while creating channels for practical relief in critical sectors such as pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and energy.
          This previously undisclosed “whitelist” represents a significant concession in practice, if not in rhetoric. Although authorities have not published the list or confirmed its existence publicly, companies are being contacted individually, often through local government bodies like Shanghai’s Pudong administration, and encouraged to verify whether their imports qualify for tariff waivers.

          Discretion Reflects Political Calculus, Economic Necessity

          The silent rollout of the exemption list reveals a delicate balancing act. China is signaling to domestic audiences and international observers that it remains firm in its retaliatory stance against Washington’s 145% import tariffs, yet it is simultaneously acknowledging the economic damage of prolonged trade disruptions and seeking to mitigate it.
          By keeping the list confidential and initiating one-on-one communication with firms, China avoids the optics of capitulation while securing the economic benefits of supply chain continuity. This duality allows Beijing to support critical industries that remain dependent on U.S. technologies—especially in sectors like medicine and microchips—without undermining its public commitment to “fighting to the end.”

          Growing List Reflects Expanding Concessions

          The exemption list appears to be expanding beyond earlier categories like pharmaceuticals and aircraft engines. Ethane imports from the U.S.—essential for industrial processing and unavailable elsewhere at similar scale—have recently been exempted. Energy firms had actively lobbied for this exception, reinforcing that exemptions are being granted based on strategic supply necessity and industry pressure.
          Some companies, according to sources, have also been asked to proactively reach out to government contacts to lobby for product-specific exemptions. This further underscores the ad hoc, case-by-case nature of the process—designed to keep political messaging intact while providing operational relief.

          Authorities Gauge Tariff Fallout Across Industries

          Parallel to granting exemptions, Chinese officials are actively surveying businesses to assess the cumulative impact of the U.S.-China trade war. Local governments in cities like Xiamen and eastern manufacturing hubs have distributed surveys to textile and semiconductor firms, asking for detailed feedback on affected trade flows, revenue impacts, and supply chain risks.
          In some instances, foreign business associations have also been invited to share detailed scenarios of disruption. These information-gathering efforts suggest that Beijing is preparing a broader recalibration of trade policy, possibly contingent on the direction of future negotiations with Washington.

          Signals Of De-escalation Amid Public Tension

          While China’s Ministry of Commerce has not commented publicly, these internal adjustments reflect a quiet but meaningful shift. U.S. President Trump hinted on Tuesday that a deal with China may be close, stating, “It’s going to be a fair deal,” suggesting some backchannel negotiations are progressing.
          This evolving situation shows correlation—not necessarily direct causation—between behind-the-scenes exemptions in Beijing and softer public messaging from Washington. The tentative synchronization points to a tactical pause in escalation, even as both sides continue to flex publicly.

          Managing The Optics Of De-escalation

          China’s ‘whitelist’ approach offers a window into how global trade diplomacy is increasingly shaped by informal, flexible mechanisms rather than headline-grabbing announcements. By quietly exempting essential U.S. goods from punitive tariffs, Beijing is protecting its industrial needs while keeping the broader geopolitical narrative intact.
          If sustained, this strategy could form the basis of a more comprehensive softening in trade tensions. However, its success depends on mutual willingness to prioritize economic pragmatism over nationalist posturing.

          Source: Reuters

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Tariff-Driven Stockpiling Chokes U.S. Economic Growth In First Quarter As GDP Falters

          Gerik

          Economic

          Tariff Front-Loading Likely Drags U.S. Economy Into Near-Stall In Q1 2025

          The U.S. economy appears to have stalled—or possibly contracted—in the first quarter of 2025, weighed down by businesses aggressively stockpiling goods in anticipation of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff hikes. According to early forecasts ahead of the Commerce Department’s GDP report, growth likely slowed to an annualized rate of just 0.3%, with some projections, such as Goldman Sachs', suggesting a 0.8% contraction. The primary culprit: a ballooning trade deficit driven by a record surge in goods imports.
          While the Trump administration aimed to pressure trading partners and reconfigure global supply chains, the near-term effect of abrupt policy shifts has been economic disruption. The 145% tariff on Chinese goods—compounded by erratic policy signals and retaliatory trade tensions—has triggered widespread economic distortion.

          Record Trade Deficit Alters GDP Composition

          A significant component of the GDP hit comes from the March trade data showing the goods trade deficit reaching an all-time high. Economists estimate this alone shaved up to 1.9 percentage points off GDP. The sharp import surge, largely preemptive and non-recurring, represents a front-loading of activity, not genuine expansion.
          Despite some technical nuance—such as large-scale gold imports inflating the numbers—analysts agree that the direction of the economy is being shaped by trade uncertainty. The Atlanta Fed's model estimates GDP contracted at a 1.5% pace when factoring in the trade imbalance, while the New York Fed projects a more optimistic 2.6% gain, underscoring the high volatility and data distortion.

          Consumer Confidence, Spending And Labor Trends Turn Soft

          Consumer sentiment has plunged to near five-year lows, as households respond to higher prices, confusing policy messages, and fears of stagnation. Airlines and retailers are pulling back forecasts, citing a collapse in discretionary spending. Moody’s Analytics and others noted that front-loaded purchases temporarily boosted consumption, but this masks real weakness: with inflation rising and the labor market cooling, savings rates are up and future spending appears set to decline.
          The PCE price index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, is expected to show core inflation rising at a 3.3% annualized rate—up from 2.6% in Q4 2024. This inflationary pressure, combined with slow or negative growth, places the economy at risk of stagflation.

          Inventories And Domestic Output Distortions

          Despite the spike in imports, inventory accumulation remained modest, further complicating GDP calculations. Some economists caution that these imbalances distort true economic output, particularly when large capital goods or commodities (like non-monetary gold) skew trade figures.
          To isolate core domestic demand, analysts often look to “final sales to private domestic purchasers”—a metric excluding trade, inventories, and government spending. But even this measure is now distorted, as tariff-driven pre-purchasing has artificially inflated private consumption.

          Market And Policy Implications: Fed Under Pressure

          With Q1 data reflecting both higher inflation and weaker growth, the Federal Reserve faces a complex policy dilemma. Markets now expect rate cuts later this year, but rising prices tied to tariffs could delay action. Treasury yields have dropped as investors price in slower growth, and confidence in long-term U.S. economic management is eroding.
          Trump’s recent executive action to soften auto tariffs—by granting offset credits through 2027—has done little to restore clarity. The broader 145% tariff regime on Chinese imports remains in effect, creating ongoing price pressures for businesses and consumers alike.
          Overall, the first-quarter economic performance offers a stark reflection of the cost of policy unpredictability. Stockpiling has distorted economic indicators, consumer confidence has fallen, and inflation is creeping upward. While tariffs are intended to shift supply chains and rebalance trade, the short-term result is an economy teetering on the edge of contraction, with measurement anomalies masking deeper fragilities.

          Source: Reuters

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          China Enacts Landmark Law To Empower Private Sector Amid Escalating U.S. Trade Pressure

          Gerik

          China–U.S. Trade War

          Economic

          Private Sector Empowerment Becomes Strategic Pillar Amid Trade War Uncertainty

          On April 30, 2025, China approved a sweeping new law aimed at reinforcing the private sector, signaling Beijing’s recognition that long-term economic resilience depends on domestic dynamism rather than external demand. The “Law on Promoting the Private Economy,” containing 78 articles, will take effect on May 20 and is being described as both a legal framework and a morale booster for private businesses increasingly strained by prolonged regulatory ambiguity and trade disruptions.
          The law was finalized after three rounds of deliberation by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress. It lays out policy commitments to improve market competition, enhance access to finance, encourage technological innovation, and protect the economic rights of private entities. This move comes as China seeks to counterbalance weakening export activity and combat investor skepticism following years of inconsistent policy signals.

          A Timely Legislative Push During Economic Vulnerability

          The new law arrives as China’s economy faces mounting headwinds from a multi-front trade confrontation with the U.S., which has imposed a 145% tariff rate on Chinese goods—combining a 125% retaliatory layer with a pre-existing 20%. In response, Beijing enacted its own 125% tariffs on American imports and halted Boeing orders while restricting strategic exports.
          However, both sides have recently signaled a willingness to moderate. China is reportedly considering suspending tariffs on certain U.S. goods such as medical equipment and industrial chemicals like ethane, echoing a reciprocal U.S. move to exempt electronics from the 145% levy. This tentative easing illustrates how trade war escalation is now driving broader domestic reform in Beijing’s economic playbook.

          Legal Reform Anchored In Economic Reality

          The law’s drafting began in 2024, spearheaded by China’s National Development and Reform Commission. A draft was released for public comment in October, incorporating key feedback from private entrepreneurs—particularly around issues like arbitrary penalties and law enforcement bias, long viewed as major deterrents to private sector investment.
          New additions to the final version directly address the private sector’s longstanding grievances, including unequal market access and the sense that state-owned enterprises enjoy preferential regulatory treatment. By pledging fairer enforcement and curbing opportunistic fines for revenue generation, the law aims to revive private sector confidence and stabilize the business climate.

          Private Sector's Pivotal Economic Role Acknowledged

          According to China’s National Bureau of Statistics, the private economy contributes over 60% of national GDP, 70% of innovation output, and 80% of urban employment. Yet despite this significance, years of overregulation and policy ambiguity have discouraged private investment and fueled a perception that the state favors public sector dominance.
          Although private investment declined in recent years, a modest rebound of 0.4% in Q1 2025 compared to the same period in 2024 may indicate early signs of recovery. Still, structural challenges remain, and Beijing appears intent on using legal instruments to offer clarity, stability, and long-term reassurance.

          Political Signaling Through High-Level Engagement

          President Xi Jinping’s decision to convene a landmark meeting with the country’s top private entrepreneurs in February—the first such session since 2018—was seen as a high-profile gesture to reset relations with the private sector. That meeting likely served as a precursor to the legislative push, underlining the central government’s shift toward enabling private enterprise as a strategic buffer against external economic shocks.
          The legislative effort also appears designed to shift expectations. Rather than short-term fiscal stimulus, Beijing is betting on structural reforms and regulatory clarity to unlock domestic productivity. The move reflects a causal approach: as external uncertainty rises, internal stabilization through legal safeguards becomes more urgent.

          Balancing Trade Policy With Domestic Reforms

          While the new law is not a direct response to tariffs, its timing and tone suggest that China is preparing for a protracted decoupling with the U.S. by fostering self-reliance and improving internal efficiency. The recent back-and-forth on tariff suspensions shows a parallel dynamic: efforts to reduce external friction are being matched by domestic reforms to ensure that future growth can be sustained without overdependence on vulnerable trade relationships.
          As the trade war with the U.S. continues to strain traditional growth engines like exports and infrastructure, the private sector is being positioned as a key source of endogenous innovation and employment. For this strategy to succeed, consistent legal protections and access to capital will be essential.

          Source: Bloomberg

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
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