Wall Street surged on news of the US and China agreeing to temporarily cut tariffs to pursue a lasting trade agreement. The Nasdaq Composite Index surged 4.35%, while the Dow and the S&P 500 rallied 2.81% and 3.26%, respectively.
On Monday, May 12, the US and China announced an agreement to lower tariffs for 90 days. Levies on US goods would drop from 125% to 10%, while tariffs on Chinese goods would fall from 145% to 30%.
US President Trump hailed the agreement as a ‘total trade reset.’ Notably, the tariff relief eased US recession concerns, lifting demand for risk assets. According to Polymarket, recession odds for 2025 fell from 66% to 40% on May 12, the lowest since April 1, a day before Liberation Day (April 2 tariffs).
On Tuesday, May 13, Asian equity markets posted mixed performances after Monday’s trade news. The Hang Seng Index slid 1.49% as tech stocks suffered heavy losses.
Brian Tyncangco, editor at Stansberry Research, underscored sentiment toward Hong Kong and Mainland China-listed stocks, stating:
“We have a pause, we don’t have a deal. We have a pause. Strategic decoupling is still on the table. Don’t get too greedy.”
On May 13, JD.com and Tencent Music Entertainment are among the big names releasing corporate earnings in a busy week for the Hong Kong earnings calendar. Tencent Holdings, Alibaba, and NetEase will also influence market sentiment with earnings reports this week. Tuesday’s pullback likely stemmed from profit-taking ahead of key earnings.
Meanwhile, Mainland benchmarks moved higher, with the CSI 300 and Shanghai Composite rising 0.14% and 0.19%, respectively.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed 1.80% on Tuesday morning as the US-China trade agreement sank demand for safe-haven assets, such as the Yen. The USD/JPY pair surged 2.13% on news of the tariff cuts, closing the May 12 session at 148.452, its highest since Liberation Day. A weaker Japanese Yen could offset the effects of tariffs by boosting the competitiveness of Japanese exports.
Nissan Motor (7201) and Sony Corp. (6758) rallied 3.09% and 1.31%, respectively. Meanwhile, tech stocks Softbank Group (9984) and Tokyo Electron (8035) advanced 1.59% and 4.94%, respectively.
Australia’s ASX 200 rose 0.40% on Tuesday morning. Mining, oil, and tech stocks rallied on the tariff news, while gold tumbled.
BHP Group Ltd. (BHP) and Rio Tinto Ltd. (RIO) jumped 2.71% and 2.44%, respectively, as iron ore spot prices rose 3.20% in response to lower tariffs, and an improving demand outlook. Woodside Energy (WDS) surged 4.21% on improving demand sentiment, while the S&P/ASX All Tech Index rose 2.91%, tracking the Nasdaq’s gains.
Meanwhile, ‘risk-on’ sentiment weighed on gold prices. Prices fell 2.74% on May 12, sending Northern Star Resources (NST) down 4.85% on May 13.
Markets will closely monitor the US-China trade-related headlines. A re-escalation could impact risk sentiment and boost safe-haven demand. Meanwhile, investors should also monitor stimulus-related news from Beijing, especially with a zero-tariff deal appearing unlikely. Fresh stimulus pledges could offset tariff uncertainties, supporting demand for Hong Kong and Mainland China-listed stocks.
Traders should remain alert and responsive to headlines on trade and central bank responses.
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With over 28 years of experience in the financial industry, Bob has worked with various global rating agencies and multinational banks. Currently he is covering currencies, commodities, alternative asset classes and global equities, focusing mostly on European and Asian markets.