Global stocks fall as Wall Street starts down for a further fall
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Global shares fell on Monday, and Wall Street started further losses after being worried about the health of the US economy with S&P 500 into his worst week in six months.
S&P Futures reduced more than 1 percent after a loss of 3.1 percent last week. Nasdaq 100, who has hit a sale in Big Tech Stocks in recent weeks, has been on his way to a similar fall on Open on Monday.
The latest fall, which also knocked out markets in Europe and Asia, followed by US President Donald Trump refused to turn off Either recession or download inflation while rejecting business concerns about lack of clarity in his tariff plans.
“Trump’s tariff politics was unpredictable with a series of withdrawal so quickly that they almost collide with the following announcement of the increase in taxes,” said Paul Donovan, the chief economist in the UBS Global Wealth Management. “Global growth and trade are threatened.”
In Europe, where the shares surpassed the US this year, the Stoxx Europe 600 index fell by 0.6 percent, which withdrew from banks and technological shares.
The German Dax, who reached a number of record maximum last week after the country agreed on the historic consumption package, fell more than 1 percent.
Investors are worried that Trump’s trade war is damaging to the American economy, and disappointing work on Friday is the latest in a series of weak data.
US Treasury gathered on Monday as investors sought safe property. A 10 -year -old treasury yield, which falls as prices, decreased by 0.06 percentage points to 4.26 percent.