Fed balm soothes trade war jabs

Fed balm soothes trade war jabs

By Mike Dolan

-What matters in U.S. and global markets today

By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Finance and Markets

Edgier world markets appeared to bat away the latest testy exchanges in the re-heated U.S.-China trade war, helped by dovish soundings from the Federal Reserve boss that included signals about an imminent end to its balance sheet rundown.

As gold spiraled on to new highs, in what global fund managers see as the most crowded trade on the planet, U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar fell after Fed Chair Jerome Powell fretted about a softening labor market and said the central bank may soon halt the reduction of bonds held on its balance sheet – a process known as quantitative tightening.

“We may approach that point in coming months,” Powell said, adding that “some signs have begun to emerge that liquidity conditions are gradually tightening.”

Whatever liquidity concerns Powell was watching, it wasn’t showing up in the latest sweep of bumper earnings from the big U.S. banks on Tuesday – with more updates on Wednesday’s diary.

But the Fed direction is helping markets navigate the outage of economic data during the government shutdown and also the fresh barbs in the U.S.-China trade standoff, with President Donald Trump saying he was considering terminating some trade ties with China – singling out cooking oil as one.

U.S. stock futures rallied ahead of Wednesday’s bell and the VIX volatility gauge retreated, with global equity and bond markets rallying broadly too. Even though new tensions in the trade row may already raise questions about its forecasts, the International Monetary Fund nudged up its world economic outlook for 2026.

Despite the trade anxiety and another worrying set of deflationary signals from China, equity markets in Shanghai and Hong Kong jumped more than 1% on hopes of more economic stimulus plans at next week’s Communist Party plenum.

In Europe, French stocks and bonds and the euro advanced also on Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu’s decision to delay pension reforms until after the 2027 election, a move that gave investors more confidence the shaky government can avoid another destabilizing election soon. LVMH’s return to growth in the third quarter helped the luxury sector and France’s CAC40 index hit its highest since March.

* The IMF nudged its 2025 global growth view higher andflagged that, while the worst spring scenarios were dodged, theoutlook is clouded by policy uncertainty, rising trade frictionsand eroding trust in institutions – risks magnified by the U.S.data blackout. Officials warned that renewed U.S.-China tariffescalation could materially slow output even as near‑termmomentum looks firmer. * A solid investment‑banking backdrop helped big lendersdeliver mostly upbeat Q3 results – Wells Fargo rallied,Citigroup’s profit rose on record revenue, and BlackRock’s AUMhit a record – supporting broader risk sentiment even asJPMorgan and Goldman dipped on profit‑taking. The read‑through:capital‑markets activity and fee lines are a tailwind intoyear‑end, but managements remain wary of headline‑risk aroundtariffs and the economy’s fog of limited official data. * Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the labor market remains in”low‑hiring, low‑firing” mode and left the door open to furthercuts, with markets now leaning toward two quarter‑pointreductions by December and an end to QT coming into view. Thecombination of easier‑Fed bets and trade jitters catapulted spotgold above $4,200 for the first time.

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