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Trump Tariff Threat to Weigh Risk Sentiment, European Stocks

Photographer: Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg
Photographer: Aaron Schwartz/Bloomberg

US President Donald Trump’s announcement of new tariffs on eight European countries over Greenland weighed risk sentiment as trading kicked off on Monday, with the region’s equities facing the brunt of any selloff.

Most major currencies were quoted weaker against the dollar in early trading, with the euro and pound sterling leading declines among Group-of-10 peers. The yen and Swiss franc were indicated slightly stronger as traders sought haven assets.

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Trump on Saturday announced a 10% tariff as of Feb. 1 on goods from European countries that have rallied to support Greenland in the face of US threats to seize the semi-autonomous Danish territory. He said the levies would increase to 25% in June unless and until “a Deal is reached for the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland.”

The announcement drew a quick rebuke from European leaders including French President Emmanuel Macron, who intends to request the activation of the European Union’s anti-coercion instrument — the bloc’s most powerful retaliatory tool. European Union lawmakers are also poised to halt approval of the trade deal with the US that was struck last year, setting a 15% US tariff for most EU goods.

“In the near term, any surprise escalation via tariffs on Europe could trigger a classic risk-off episode, especially after a strong start to the year supported by constructive sentiment,” said Florian Ielpo, head of macro research at Lombard Odier Asset Management. “In that scenario, government bonds could benefit, quality assets would likely outperform, and gold could catch a bid,” he added.

The impact is likely to be on equities in the short-term and less obvious for bonds and currencies, according to Vincent Mortier, chief investment officer at Amundi SA. The US holiday on Monday also suggests thinner market conditions and no Treasury cash trade overnight.

The fallout from the news “could have some negative impact on European growth prospects but most probably on a very limited scale,” Mortier said. “Longer term, that could be a positive catalyst for Europe to accelerate its strategic autonomy agenda and form new alliances.”

Trump’s tariff threat could prove an unwelcome interruption to the rally in European equities, which have outperformed their US peers as investors poured into various regional sectors from defense to miners and chip-equipment makers. The region’s outlook has been boosted by increased German fiscal spending, lower interest rates and expectations of improving profits.

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