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Asian markets mixed as traders weigh Trump’s latest tariff salvo


Donald Trump warned he will impose 25 percent tariffs on imports of steel and aluminium (STR)
Donald Trump warned he will impose 25 percent tariffs on imports of steel and aluminium (STR)

Equities were mixed in Asia on Monday after Donald Trump ramped up his trade war by announcing huge tariffs on steel and aluminium imports and warned every country would face “reciprocal” levies.

Another week got off to an uncertain start following losses on Wall Street that came in reaction to data showing US consumers increasingly worried about inflation and news that far fewer jobs than expected were created last month.

The US president has resumed his hardball tactics on trade since returning to the White House by last week hitting China with a fresh batch of tariffs, having reached a deal to delay measures against Canada and Mexico.

The moves have fanned concerns about the global economy and jolted a recent rally in markets.

Trump said Sunday 25 percent duties would be imposed on “any steel coming into the United States”, adding this will also affect aluminium.

He also said he would announce “reciprocal tariffs” to match his government’s levies to the rates charged by other countries on US products.

“Every country will be reciprocal,” he warned, adding that he would provide details on Tuesday or Wednesday.

The news weighed on commodity-linked currencies, with the Canadian dollar, Mexican peso and South Korean won all weaker.

Canada is the largest source of steel and aluminium imports to the United States, according to US trade data. Brazil, Mexico and South Korea are also major steel providers to the country.

At a meeting with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba in Washington on Friday, Trump threatened to target Japanese goods if the US trade deficit with the country is not equalised.

Equity markets were mixed, with Tokyo, Sydney, Seoul, Jakarta, Wellington and Taipei all lower.

– ‘It’s an escalation’ –

“Trump’s latest move isn’t merely another trade skirmish; it’s an escalation of his ‘America First’ trade doctrine where ‘no country is off-limits’,” said Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management.

“This high-stakes gamble could disrupt global supply chains. Markets have witnessed this scenario before — last-minute exemptions and backroom deals (see: Mexico and Canada tariffs) — but if Trump maintains his hardline stance this time, Asian economies will be the first to feel the impact.”

Still, Hong Kong and Shanghai extended last week’s gains, with Chinese tech firms boosted by the emergence of startup DeepSeek, which has shaken up the AI sector with a chatbot that it said rivalled those of US giants but at a fraction of the cost.



Read More: Asian markets mixed as traders weigh Trump’s latest tariff salvo

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