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Asia stocks, oil prices plunge; markets hunger for rapid US rate cuts

7 Apr 2025, 2:30 AM
Asia stocks, oil prices plunge; markets hunger for rapid US rate cuts

SYDNEY, April 7 — Major stock indexes plunged in Asia today as White House officials showed no sign of backing away from their sweeping tariff plans, and investors wagered the mounting risk of recession could see US interest rates cut as early as May.

Futures markets moved swiftly to price in almost five quarter-point cuts in US rates this year, pulling Treasury yields down sharply and hampering the dollar.

The carnage came as President Donald Trump told reporters that investors would have to take their medicine and he would not do a deal with China until the US trade deficit was sorted out. Beijing declared the markets had spoken on their retaliation plans.

"The only real circuit breaker is President Trump's iPhone and he is showing little sign that the market selloff is bothering him enough to reconsider a policy stance he has believed in for decades," said Sean Callow, a senior FX analyst at ITC Markets in Sydney.

Investors had thought the loss of trillions of dollars in wealth and the likely body blow to the economy would make Trump reconsider his plans.

"The size and disruptive impact of US trade policies, if sustained, would be sufficient to tip a still healthy US and global expansion into recession," said Bruce Kasman, head of economics at JPMorgan, putting the risk of a downturn at 60 per cent.

"We continue to expect a first Fed easing in June," he added. "However, we now think the Committee cuts at every meeting through January, bringing the top of the funds rate target range down to 3.0 per cent."

S&P 500 futures slid 3.1 per cent in volatile trade, while Nasdaq futures dived 4.0 per cent, adding to last week's almost US$6 trillion (RM27 trillion) in market losses.

The pain likewise engulfed Europe, with Eurostoxx 50 futures down 3.0 per cent, while FTSE futures lost 2.7 per cent and DAX futures 3.5 per cent.

Japan's Nikkei sank 6 per cent to hit lows last seen in late 2023, while South Korea dropped 5 per cent. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 3.6 per cent.

Chinese blue chips lost 4.4 per cent, as markets waited to see if Beijing would respond with more stimulus. Taiwan's main index, which had been shut on Thursday and Friday, tumbled nearly 10 per cent, leading policymakers to curb short selling.

The gloomier outlook for global growth kept oil prices under heavy pressure, following steep losses last week.

Brent fell US$1.35 to US$64.23 (RM6 to RM289) a barrel, while US crude dived US$1.395 to US$60.60 (RM6.20 to RM272) per barrel.

— Reuters

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