
By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
Tariffied once again
The respite was too good to last, and sure enough, it didn’t. World stocks fell into a downward spiral on Wednesday led by tech losses after Washington said it is putting new curbs on AI chip exports to China, marking an escalation in the global trade war.
The Trump administration’s latest broadside sparked huge demand for safe-haven assets like gold, the Swiss franc and U.S. Treasuries, even though Fed Chair Jerome Powell signalled he is in no rush to cut interest rates.
If U.S. Big Tech had acquired a safe-haven status in the eyes of some investors in recent years, it is disappearing fast. More on that and more below, but first, a round-up of the day’s main market moves. I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out to me with comments at . You can also follow me at @ReutersJamie and @reutersjamie.bsky.social.
If you have more time to read today, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets.
1. In a fog of uncertainty, Fed policy storm could beapproaching 2. WTO slashes 2025 trade growth forecast, warns of deeperslump 3. US-China decoupling is crossing a Rubicon 4. EXCLUSIVE-Nvidia kept some China customers in the darkabout new US chip clampdown, sources say 5. Record gold crowded by one mega player: Mike Dolan
Today’s Key Market Moves
* Wall Street falls, dragged lower by tech – Nasdaq -3%,S&P 500 -2.2%, Dow -1.7%. The Philadelphia semiconductor indexand the Roundhouse ‘Magnificent 7’ ETF both fall 4%. * Nvidia falls nearly 7% – at one stage it was down 10% -wiping some $175 billion off its market cap. AMD shares fall7.4%. * Chinese tech shares listed in Hong Kong fall 3.7%. * Safe-haven gold surges 3.4% to a new high of $3,342/oz,and the Swiss franc is the biggest gainer in the G10 FX space,rallying 1% against the dollar. * The dollar index falls 0.9%, back down to last week’sthree-year low. * The Canadian dollar underperforms, gaining only 0.6% eventhough the Bank of Canada paused its easing cycle and held ratessteady at 2.75% in what traders and economists had said was aclose call. * Nikkei and DAX futures point to falls of around 0.2% and0.5%, respectively, at the open in Japan and Germany onThursday. * Oil rises nearly 2% on supply concerns after the U.S.issues new sanctions targeting Chinese importers of Iranian oil.
When the chips are down, really down
After a few days of relative calm, investors buckled up on Wednesday as the Trump administration’s latest trade war salvo sent world markets reeling again, with the big loser being Big Tech.