US stock futures rose after President Trump signed an executive order imposing
25% tariffs on car imports
.
Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average went up 0.3%
(YM=F)
and futures tied to the benchmark S&P 500
(ES=F)
rose 0.2%. Futures attached to the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite
(NQ=F)
inched up 0.1%.
Trump announced the new duties from the Oval Office on Wednesday, saying they would "spur growth like you've never seen before." The tariffs on foreign cars are set to begin April 2, the same day that
reciprocal tariffs are set take effect
.
Wall Street, however, so far does not seem convinced that new tariffs are an unassailable good for the economy. Stocks
fell on Wednesday
in anticipation of Trump's announcement, and they have dipped
throughout the month
when the president has presented a hardline stance on what's to come in the trade war.
At the Oval Office, Trump chimed in again on upcoming reciprocal levies. "We're going to be very fair, we're going to be very nice," the president said, adding "we're going to keep it somewhat conservative."
However, as the auto tariffs were unveiled,
reports emerged
that negotiations between the EU and US on reciprocal duties had made little headway, and the EU is bracing for the announcement of a double-digit tariff rate across the bloc next week.
Investors will get a fresh look at inflation on Friday, with the release of February's Personal Consumption Expenditures Index, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge.
Investors remain worried that the US economy could buckle if Trump's new levies exacerbate
sticky inflation
and
slowing economic growth.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell recently reassured markets that
rising prices from Trump's tariffs are expected to be "transitory,"
but his stance has
raised questions from Fed watchers
and, more recently,
a central bank policymaker.
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