The Australian sharemarket is expected to lift on opening after Wall Street rallied last week despite consumers becoming more worried about rising prices than they have in decades. Market traders are predicting a slight 0.23 per cent jump in the local bourse after all three major US indexes rallied last Friday and posted their strongest weekly gains in years.
Markets have had a jumpy week, enough to make even the most confident planner rethink. Credit: Louie Douvis As consumers and businesses face widespread uncertainty around the Trump administration’s whipsawing trade policies, a widely followed survey from the University of Michigan found that consumers’ expectations for the next year’s inflation jumped to 6.7 per cent, the highest reading since 1981.
It’s the fourth consecutive month that consumer sentiment has worsened, as people across demographics say they believe unemployment and inflation will get substantially worse. “The Trump trade war is terrifying consumers who cannot make up their mind between what is more likely, a recession or an inflation outbreak,” Chris Rupkey, chief economist at the research firm Fwdbonds, wrote in a note to clients. “The economic outlook looks increasingly grim.
” Late Friday, smartphones, computers and other electronic devices won exemptions from some US tariffs as part of a forthcoming levy on semiconductors. The move was a temporary victory for Apple and other manufacturers who rely on Chinese manufacturing in particular. Despite consumers’ concerns stocks rose on Friday in a relatively calm market after several days of sharp swings.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index gained 2 per cent, the S&P 500 rose 1.8 per cent and the Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 1.6 per cent, with trading volumes the lightest in several days.
For the week, the S&P 500 and Dow average recorded gains of 5.7 per cent and 5 per cent, their best weekly performance since November 2023. The Nasdaq composite rose more than 7 per cent for the week, an increase not seen since November 2022.
All three indexes remain double-digit percentages below their peaks in February. Friday’s gains came after China signalled that it wouldn’t increase tariffs on US goods beyond hiking customs duties to 125 per cent. China’s State Council said it would ignore any further US efforts to “play the tariff numbers game”.
The US-China trade war could mean the average American household will face a loss of $US4700 ($7528) at last year’s price levels when accounting for president Donald Trump’s tariffs, which will also cut US gross domestic product by around 1.1 per cent, according to an April 10 estimate from the Budget Lab at Yale University. Outside the United States, sharemarkets settled down after the White House on Thursday said it has started trade talks with several countries.
But a technical problem on Friday created more trade-related chaos when US Customs and Border Protection suffered a glitch in its system for exempting freight from tariffs, leaving the government unable to collect duties on imports. While share prices were relatively calm on Friday compared with recent days, other financial indicators raised alarm for the health of the financial system. A sell-off in government bonds resumed as the yield on the 10-year US Treasury climbed above 4.
5 per cent at one point. Yields move inversely to prices. Treasury bonds are usually seen as a safe haven in times of economic turmoil, but analysts say a shortage of cash in the market is now driving global investors to cash out bonds.
JoAnne Bianco, senior investment strategist at BondBloxx Investment Management, told The Washington Post that the activity in bond yields reflects the market’s concerns about “the inflationary effects of tariffs”. If higher yields persist, “we’re not only going to have more expensive consumer products but also potentially a higher cost of borrowing,” Bianco cautioned. “The longer this extreme volatility goes on in financial markets, the more likely that something in our financial system could break, and we’re in a full-on crisis.
” The US dollar continued a months-long decline this week and registered its biggest single-day drop since 2022 on Thursday. The dollar has fallen nearly 8 per cent since Inauguration Day in a prolonged slide. Meanwhile, the price of gold has surged to its highest level in more than 40 years as it continued its streak of records, trading at $US3255.
30 on Friday afternoon. Corporate leaders in the United States have said they are prepared for an economic slowdown if trade tensions continue. “I think we’re very close, if not in, a recession now,” BlackRock chief executive Larry Fink told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” show on Friday.
The investment firm’s conversations with clients have been dominated by uncertainty and anxiety about the future of the economy, Fink said in an earnings release on Friday. Further increases “no longer have any economic significance” because the current levels make US exports to China not financially viable, China’s State Council said in a statement, adding that imposing higher tariffs would make the US a joke. The new Chinese tariffs take effect on Saturday.
China announced its latest tariff increase after most Asian markets closed. Ahead of the announcement, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index and China’s Shanghai composite index ended the day slightly higher. Taiwan’s index logged a 2.
5 per cent gain. Japan’s Nikkei 225 lost almost 3 per cent. The economy faces considerable turbulence, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said as his company also reported its quarterly results.
US efforts to change tax policy and deregulate could help the economy, Dimon said, but “tariffs and ‘trade wars,’ ongoing sticky inflation, high fiscal deficits and still rather high asset prices and volatility” pose potential risks. “The China issue is a major issue,” he said in a call with analysts on Friday, and “a significant change we’ve never seen in our lives.” But keeping “the world safe and free for democracy” matters more than short-term economic results, Dimon said.
“I really almost don’t care fundamentally about what the economy does next,” he said. Bloomberg The Market Recap newsletter is a wrap of the day’s trading. Get it each weekday afternoon .
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Business
Stocks set to lift despite consumer worries about rising prices
The Australian sharemarket is expected to lift on opening after Wall Street rallied last week despite consumers becoming more worried about rising prices than they have in decades.