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Dow jumps after the reversal of the Trump tariff tariff

Shares rose on Tuesday after President Donald Trump declared that he had reset a deadline for the establishment of tariffs for the European Union.

The width S&P 500 rose by about 2%, while the Dow Jones Industrial average received 713 points or 1.7%. The Technical Feavy Nasdaq rose by around 2.4%.

In the meantime, the return or the percentage of investors decreased to 4.43% after the 10 -year US Ministry of Finance, after being floated to the government with or over 4.5% over 4.5% last week.

Global investors also increased the demand for state bonds around the world, including the US state bonds, after Reuters had reported that Japanese officials were considering lending less money than budget Hawks feared.

Trump's decision to delay a deadline for trade talks from the European Union raised the feelings, even when he showed the willingness to improve his trade policy during ongoing operation. On Sunday, Trump restored the date on his social platform of truth, on which he would impose new tariffs to the EU the previous period of July 9th. Two days earlier, Trump threatened to meet the region with a 50% tariff in general on June 1st, citing breastfeeding -dehorn negotiations.

The EU's head of trading, Maros Sefcovic, spoke to the Commercial Secretary Howard Lutnick and said that they “continue to stay in constant contact,” said a position on X.

Trump's most recent EU tariff and the threat, tech giants such as Apple for smartphones that were produced abroad to impose a tariff of 25% on, after a steady time of overall increases in the past few weeks, sent the markets into the back.

The S&P 500 had declined by about 1.3% this year.

Some analysts said that Trump's EU post on Friday was probably a negotiating tactic, which was nevertheless signaled that the movements for the President's second administration will probably be a permanent characteristic of the president.

“At this stage, we do not tend to change our work assumption that the EU tariffs will ultimately regulate around 10%,” wrote analysts of the Capital Economics Consultancy in a reference to customers on Friday after Trump's tariff Salvo, “However, this underlines risks and that the way to an agreement could be strong.”

While Trump's most bombastic collective bargaining (including the morning) does not become a reality, “he” has still levied significant import taxes in the past four months, and his administration is probably not yet finished, “said Adam Criisfulli from Vital Knowledge Market Media Comment.

This week, retailers receive additional snapshots of the economy and the corporate landscape when the Bureau of Economic Analysis reports the preferred inflation measure of the Federed Reserve, the personal consumption index. Several retailers and chip makers Nvidia who have raised the boom for artificial intelligence will report the profits on Wednesday.

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