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Stocks rally after the French election

Stocks rallied on Monday after the first round of France’s presidential elections on Sunday was cheered by markets.

Results in France’s election on Sunday saw centrist Emmanuel Macron and far-right nationalist Marine Le Pen emerge as the top two candidates for a run-off in two weeks’ time. Early polling shows that Macron is expected to win by a wide margin, with one poll showing the 39-year-old is expected to get 62% of the vote, according to Bloomberg.

Le Pen, who has been compared to U.S. president Donald Trump, was seen as a risk to markets for, among other reasons, vowing to hold a referendum on France leaving the EU were she to win election as president.

When all was said and done on Monday, the Dow was up 216 points, the S&P 500 added 25, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq closed at a new record, gaining 73.3 points to 5,983.82. Each of the indexes gained more than 1%.

U.S. stocks popped on Monday. (Source: Yahoo Finance)
U.S. stocks popped on Monday. (Source: Yahoo Finance)

The U.S. markets took their lead from stocks in Europe, where the CAC in Paris closed higher by 4%, the Dax is Germany gained 3.3%, the FTSE in London rose 2%, and the Euro Stoxx 50 was up 3.9% on Monday.

The euro was also significantly stronger on Monday, with the currency gaining more than 1.2% against the dollar to trade as high as 1.086. The euro was up better than 2% against the Japanese yen, and higher by 1.3% against the pound. Gold was down about 1%, while WTI crude oil fell about 0.8% to trade near $49.23 per barrel.

Update 2:26 p.m. ET

Details are trickling out about Trump’s tax overhaul, and it’s starting to look like this reform will not be revenue-neutral and the emphasis will be on getting tax rates lower by whatever means available.

From The Wall Street Journal:

President Donald Trump has ordered White House aides to accelerate efforts to draft a tax plan slashing the corporate rate to 15% and prioritizing cuts in tax rates over an attempt to not increase the deficit, according to a person familiar with the directive.

During a meeting inside the Oval Office last week, Mr. Trump told staff he wants a massive tax cut to sell to the American people, the person said. It was less important to him if the plan loses revenue. Mr. Trump told his team to “get it done,” in time to release a plan by Wednesday.

This report appeared to give a slight bump to markets, which were sitting near their best levels of the day in afternoon trading.

Update 2:05 p.m. ET

Quick one on the Trump administration.

CNBC’s Kayla Tausche tweeted Monday afternoon that Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said that a tax plan — which President Trump said last week would be unveiled Wednesday — “will pay for itself with economic growth.”