Trump's 'America First' policies are boosting stock markets overseas

Trump's 'America First' policies are boosting stock markets overseas

President Donald Trump’s policies are sending tremors through Wall Street , but they’re having the opposite effect an ocean away.

While the White House is racing to defend its economic agenda at home, Trump has made progress on a top foreign policy goal — getting Europe to boost its military spending. Key foreign leaders have reaffirmed support for Ukraine after Trump’s public harangue of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy last month and taken steps to expand their defense outlays.

That’s pushing the shares of international military firms higher, giving a jolt to stock markets in some of the very countries where Trump has taken his trade war.

European stocks are seeing their strongest start to any year since 1998, and international stocks overall are outperforming their American counterparts by more than any year since 1990, according to data JPMorgan Asset Management Chief Market Strategist Gabriela Santos shared with NBC News.

The STOXX Europe 600 index, which tracks hundreds of companies across 17 European countries, is up 7.7% so far this year. Germany’s DAX index has risen more than 15%, and the CAC 40 in Paris is up around 9%. Across the English Channel, London’s FTSE 100 is up 5.6%.

The U.S.-based S&P 500, by contrast, has dropped more than 4.1% this year, and the Nasdaq Composite has lost more than 8%.

NATO allies’ reinvigorated military plans have helped power the swings. Trump has repeatedly said he wants allies in the coalition to increase their defense spending to 5% of each member state’s gross domestic product, far higher than NATO’s current 2% minimum. U.K.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Feb. 25 that the country’s military outlays would hit 2.7% by 2027 and eventually rise to 3%. On Friday, Britain unveiled a 2 billion pound boost ($2.5 billion) in loans available for U.K. defense firms to juice their exports to allied militaries.

Trump's 'America First' policies are boosting stock markets overseas

In Germany, the likely incoming chancellor, Freidrich Merz, reached a deal with lawmakers Friday to loosen the country’s financial crisis-era rules on defense and security spending. The move is meant to unlock as much as 1 trillion euro ($1.1 trillion) to bolster the nation’s defenses.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who has joined Starmer among the world leaders mediating talks between Washington and Kyiv, said this month that he planned to hike spending on national security and defense from around 2% of GDP to 3.5%, a 30 billion euro ($32.6 billion) increase.

And the European Commission, the executive branch of the European Union, recently announced 150 billion euro ($163 billion) in loans to its 27 member states, secured by E.U. budget funds. It also laid out plans to loosen strict fiscal rules on member states to free up an additional 650 billion euro ($707 billion) meant for military spending.

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