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Stock Rally Loses Steam After Mixed Tariff News: Markets Wrap

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(Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks snapped a five-day winning streak as a brief global relief rally gave up momentum after mixed signals from the Trump administration on its plans for China tariffs.

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A regional gauge of stocks fell 0.3% as market enthusiasm got curbed after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent cast doubt on a timely resolution to the US-China trade war. Shares in Hong Kong dropped 1.1%, the first time in four days. The yen flipped after two days of losses and the dollar weakened. Gold jumped 1.4% in increased demand for the safe-haven asset. Equity-index futures in Europe slid 0.1% amid a slew of earnings from BNP Paribas SA, Nestle SA and Roche Holding AG.

The global rally in stocks on Wednesday - after wild gyrations earlier this month - came on signs US President Donald Trump is rethinking the most-aggressive elements of his stances on trade and the Federal Reserve. Still, investors find it hard to forecast where the markets are headed amid a slew of headlines from various officials in the administration and frequent back-and-forth by Trump on his tariffs.

“It’s his negotiation style,” said Joshua Crabb, head of Asia Pacific equities at Robeco Hong Kong Ltd. “Key is to stay focused on the fundamentals and what is in the price on a scenario of outcomes. Margin of safety is more important now.”

Trump signaled that the US is going to have a fair deal with China, adding late Wednesday that the country may receive a new tariff rate in the next two to three weeks. The administration is also considering whether to reduce certain tariffs targeting the auto industry that carmaker executives have warned would deal a severe blow to profits and jobs.

Bessent said that Trump hasn’t offered to take down US tariffs on China on a unilateral basis. Asked if there was no unilateral offer from the president to de-escalate, he said “not at all.”

The Treasury secretary said that the administration is looking at multiple factors with regard to China beyond just tariffs — including non-tariff barriers and government subsidies. He also said that the strongest relationship between Washington and Beijing is at the top, and that there was no timeframe for engagement. A full re-balancing of trade might take two to three years, he said.