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FTSE and global markets bounce back after Trump’s tech tariff reprieve

The global stock market has begun to rebound this week, with the FTSE 100 surging, as the US drops its tariffs on certain electronics.

London’s blue-chip index surged 1.97 per cent, or 157 points to 8121, in early trades.

Investors are betting that tech groups such as Apple will benefit from a carve-out from Donald Trump’s so-called reciprocal trade tariffs, which include a 145 per cent levy on Chinese imports.

But the optimism was likely tempered after White House officials spent Sunday downplaying the significance of the exemptions.

“They’re exempt from the reciprocal tariffs but they’re included in the semiconductor tariffs, which are coming in probably a month or two,” commerce secretary Howard Lutnick told ABC on Sunday.

The Trump administration says the reprieve for tech companies are not an ‘exception’ (AFP via Getty Images)

Mr Trump added to the confusion hours later, saying on social media that there was no “exception” because the goods are “just moving to a different” bucket.

He said they will still face a 20 per cent tariff as part of his administration’s move to punish China for its role in fentanyl trafficking.

Markets in Asia rebounded, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 rising 1.2 per cent, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index rising 2.2 per cent.

Germany’s Dax index rose 1.9 per cent in early trades, while France’s Cac 40 was up 1.8 per cent.

Richard Hunter, an analyst at Interactive Investor, said UK markets have lately been “ever subject to changing conditions which has seen any initial strength dissipating over recent trading sessions as new global developments emerge”.

Nonetheless, the FTSE’s spike “shows some evidence of continued interest in the UK as an investment destination amid the turmoil elsewhere”.

The FTSE 100 rose sharply on Monday morning after the tariff exemptions (Danny Lawson/PA)

The FTSE 100 rose sharply on Monday morning after the tariff exemptions (Danny Lawson/PA) (PA Wire)

Early gains in the UK included companies with more exposure to China, such as Prudential and Standard Chartered, which saw 3 per cent and 3.5 per cent increases in share price, respectively.

Barclays, which has significant US exposure, also surged 4 per cent in early trading.

The Trump administration had said late on Friday that it would exclude electronics from broader so-called reciprocal tariffs, designed to keep the prices down for phones and other consumer products made abroad.

China’s commerce ministry in a Sunday statement welcomed the change as a small step even as it called for the US to cancel the rest of its tariffs.

Sparing electronics was expected to benefit big tech companies such as Apple and Samsung and chip makers such as Nvidia.

It was the latest tariff change by the Trump administration, which has made several U-turns in its massive plan to put tariffs in place on goods from most countries.

Investors will next turn to the opening bell on Wall Street on Monday afternoon, after the tariff turmoil battered the stocks of tech’s “Magnificent Seven” last week: Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Tesla, Google parent Alphabet and Facebook parent Meta.

At one point, their combined market value had plunged by 2.1 trillion dollars, or 14 per cent, from 2 April when Mr Trump unveiled sweeping tariffs on a wide range of countries.

When he paused the tariffs apart from on China on Wednesday, the lost value in those companies was pared to 644 billion dollars, or a 4 per cent decline.

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  • Source of information and images “independent”

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