Pound rises amid Trump's tariff U-turn


The pound was higher against the dollar, up by 0.3% to $1.2852, following US president Donald Trump’s decision to pause tariffs for 90 days in a dramatic shift that offered some relief to jittery markets.

CCY – Delayed Quote USD

As of 11:35:37 BST. Market open.

A possible relief rally in global equity markets, and prospect for stabilisation in the bond market, is fuel for the recovery of the pound on Thursday.

Trump blamed people “getting a little bit yippy, a little bit afraid” for the pause in global tariffs, after they triggered the most intense episode of financial market volatility since the early days of the Covid pandemic.

Read more: FTSE 100 LIVE: European stocks record biggest surge in five years

But he denied making a U-turn, telling reporters that “you have to be flexible”.

The dollar extended its losses, with the dollar index (DX-Y.NYB), which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, losing 0.3% to 102.65.

In other currency moves, sterling was muted against the euro, trading at €1.1699.

CCY – Delayed Quote USD

As of 11:35:57 BST. Market open.

Gold prices climbed as investors flocked to safe-haven bullion after the US hiked tariffs on China, the top metals consumer, escalating the already heated trade war, despite a 90-day pause on tariffs for other countries.

Gold futures gained 1.8% to $3,133.30 per ounce at the time of writing, while the spot price rose 2.3% to $3,113.63 an ounce.

Trump said on Wednesday that he would raise the tariff on Chinese imports to 125% from 104%. The world’s two largest economies have engaged in a series of tit-for-tat tariffs over the past week.

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“If we enter a slow growth period, which is our base case, we think rates will eventually head lower and push gold higher since inflation worries will still be with us for much of the year due to tariff impacts,” Marex analyst Edward Meir said.

“Eventually we do see $3,200 possibly by month-end, if not earlier.”

Gold, widely viewed as a hedge against inflation and geopolitical uncertainty, has risen more than 18% so far this year.

As of 6:26:24 GMT-4. Market open.

Oil prices fell on Thursday as renewed hostilities in the US-China trade war unsettled markets, erasing much of the previous session’s rebound. The decline came despite a temporary pause in tariffs for most countries, as investors focused instead on the deepening rift between Washington and Beijing.

Brent crude prices lost 1.2% to $64.70 a barrel at the time of writing. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude retreated by 2% to $61.14 a barrel.

The losses followed a volatile trading day on Wednesday, when both benchmarks had initially plunged as much as 7% before recovering to close around 4% higher on news of the tariff pause.

But market sentiment quickly soured again after China retaliated against US tariff measures with a sharp escalation of its own. Beijing announced it would impose tariffs of 84% on US goods starting Thursday, a steep increase from the previously announced 34%, according to the Chinese finance ministry.

Read more: UK housing market outlook weakens as trade war sparks uncertainty

“The escalating trade war between China and the US is stoking fears of a global recession,” said Giovanni Staunovo, oil analyst at UBS. “While oil demand has likely not suffered yet, rising concerns of weaker oil demand over the coming months require lower prices to trigger supply adjustments to prevent an oversupplied market.”

Yeap Jun Rong, market strategist at IG, echoed the cautious outlook. “We may expect oil prices to resume its broader downward trend once the optimism around the recent tariff reprieve fades,” he said. “Demand-side headwinds persist, with China’s growth outlook at risk from the ongoing tit-for-tat.”

In broader market movements, the FTSE 100 (^FTSE) climbed 4.7% to 8,040 points on Thursday morning.

As of 6:26:19 GMT-4. Market open.

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