The square exchange complex, which houses the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on February 26, 2025.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty images
The Asian-Pacific markets opened above Tuesday, bouncing losses from the previous session against the pricing policy of US President Donald Trump and the threats of even higher samples against China.
Australia S&P / ASX 200 added 0.18% to the opening.
Japanese Nikkei 225 increased by 6.41% while the Topix gained 6.81%. South Korea Kospi increased 1.7% while Kosdaq with small capitalization climbed 2.35%.
The Hong Kong Hang Seng index increased by 2.25%, while the Hang Seng Tech index jumped by 4.17%. On Monday, Hong Kong’s stock market losses in the region, with the Hang Seng index fell by more than 13% to record its highest decrease of one day since 1997, according to FactSet data.
The CSI of continental China increased by 0.24%.
Trump on Monday threatened 50% of additional prices on China if Beijing has not increased his rights over American imports.
The composite Jakarta of Indonesia slipped more than 9% after trade resumed after the holidays, triggering a circuit breaker.
Trump was held at his aggressive strategy of world prices during the weekend, with an initial unilateral rate of 10% in force on Saturday. Wall Street hoped for signs of progress in negotiations between the United States and other countries, “reciprocal” prices to start on April 9.
“Asian actions have undergone their worst routing for years, plunging into multi -year stockings in a day marked by panic and uncertainty,” said Murthy Grandhi, analyst of business profiles in the GlobalData data and analysis company.
“The renewed fears of the trade war have rekindled the concerns of a global economic slowdown, already breaking an already fragile investors’ confidence,” he said, adding that the way to follow depends on the clarity of policies and diplomatic commitment.
Us Stock Futures increased after the S&P 500 has extended its losses for a third day after the announcement of Trump prices. The term contracts linked to the S&P 500 were approximately 1% higher, while the Nasdaq-100 term contracts gained 1.1%. The term contracts linked to the industrial average of Dow Jones jumped 476 points, or 1.2%.
In the United States, the three major averages have decreased. The industrial average of Dow Jones dropped a third day after the price deployment of President Donald Trump, lowering 0.91% to close to 37,965.60. The NASDAQ composite increased by 0.10% to deposit at 15,603.26. The S&P 500 lost 0.23% to end at 5,062.25.
– John Melloy of CNBC, Hakyung Kim and Tanaya Macheel contributed to this report.