Trading Day: Market nurses huge hangover as tariff reality sets in

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - TRADING DAY

Making sense of the forces driving global markets

By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist

Desperately seeking safety

After Wall Street clocked one of its best days in history on Wednesday, a sense of sober realism was always likely to return on Thursday. But few would have anticipated such a sudden, screeching reversal in sentiment.

Stocks sank and demand for 'safe-haven' assets exploded - gold leaped 3% to a new high and the Swiss franc had one of its best days ever. Maybe U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff truce on Wednesday wasn't as conciliatory as it first seemed.

More on that below, but first, a round-up of the main market moves on another extraordinary day. 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. Tariffs caused US Treasury market dislocations, raisinglonger term concerns 2. Global investors hunker down for volatility even astariff pause is welcomed 3. Trump tariff pause does not change fundamentals for aFed that sees risks ahead 4. Wall Street's week of whiplash brought fear, relief andcaution 5. Safe European home? Scared money seeks German bunds

Today's Key Market Moves

* The S&P 500 tumbles 3.5%, the Nasdaq 4.3% and the Dow2.5%. * All 10 sectors in the S&P 500 decline, led by a 6.4% slidein energy. * The euro hits a near two-year high of $1.1241, rising morethan 2% for its best day since December 2015. * The Swiss franc rallies 4% to a 10-year high, its biggestgain since January 2015, ranking among its top 10 best daysever. * Gold leaps 3% to a new high of $3,176/oz. * U.S. Treasuries rally at the short end of the curve,pushing yields down as much as 15 basis points. But the long endsells off. * A $22 billion auction of 30-year Treasuries draws soliddemand, but the yield rises again and is eyeing its biggestweekly rise - 46 bps - since 1982. * Oil slides nearly 4% as investors reassess the globaldemand outlook. * Japanese stock futures point to a 4% fall at the open onFriday, reversing much of Thursday's 9% rise. * Bitcoin falls 4%. * China's 'CNH' offshore yuan strengthens but overallpressure on the Chinese currency is still to the downside. Theonshore yuan is at a key level around 7.35 per dollar.

Market nurses hangover as harsh tariff reality sets in

The relief from Trump's tariff climb-down was visceral, but fleeting. Global trade tensions may have cooled a bit, but the outlook for consumers, businesses and investors is as murky as it was before Trump's surprise Truth Social post on Wednesday.

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