4 April 2025

Markets everywhere reacting to Trump's new tariffs

| Chris Johnson
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Donald Trump has sent stock markets tumbling with his Liberation Day tariffs. Image: Social media.

Australian shares dropped to a near eight-month low on Friday (4 March) and the US stock market recorded its largest falls since the shock of COVID-19 in 2020.

Wall Street lost more than $US3 trillion ($A4.75 trillion) almost immediately following US President Donald Trump’s so-called Liberation Day declaration of sweeping tariffs on all goods imported to America.

Overnight, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1,679.39 points, or 3.98 per cent, at 40,545.93 points.

The S&P 500 lost 274.45 points, or 4.84 per cent, and Nasdaq fell 1,050.44 points, or 5.97 per cent.

The US President announced a 10 per cent baseline tariff on Thursday (Australian time), but with some imports from various countries being whacked with even higher imposts – up to 49 per cent.

Australia fared better than most countries, so far attracting only a 10 per cent tariff, but with a special Trump mention of Australian beef.

READ ALSO PM says Trump’s tariffs on Australia’s beef and more are ‘not the act of a friend’

Fiji is the hardest hit among Pacific island nations, with a 32 per cent tariff; followed by Vanuatu with a 22 per cent tariff; and Nauru with a 30 per cent tariff.

Mr Trump has described the stock market reaction in the US as America “healing” and said “the markets are going to boom”.

But some economists are predicting a US recession, which will have far-reaching impacts for the global economy.

Asian markets posted further losses after opening on Friday, with tech stocks being hit hard.

Tokyo’s Nikkei index was down 1.8 per cent, adding to a drop on Thursday of 2.77 per cent.

The Topix index fell 2.3 per cent, having lost 3.08 per cent on Thursday.

In Australia, commodities were in a sell-off, and the S&P/ASX 200 index fell by 1.3 per cent to 7,756 before midday Friday.

Technology firms dipped five per cent to a one-year low; and financial firms were trading 1.6 per cent lower.

Energy firms lost 6.8 per cent to record their lowest level since November 2020, with prices suffering their biggest fall in three years.

Woodside Energy fell seven per cent; Santos fell 7.2 per cent; Fortescue was down 1.6 per cent; and Rio Tinto fell 2.3 per cent.

The major supermarkets rose, however, with Coles up 2.1 and Woolworths up 0.9 per cent.

READ ALSO Campaign hijacked by tariffs but no one seems to mind

While Mr Trump said the tariffs were reciprocal measures made necessary because of trade barriers in place around the world, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is dangling the prospect of using dispute resolution powers in Australia’s free trade agreement with the US.

“The Australian people have every right to view this action by the Trump Administration as undermining our free and fair trading relationship,” the Prime Minister said.

“Our existing free trade agreement with the United States contains dispute resolution mechanisms.

“We want to resolve this issue without resorting to using these.”

Mr Albanese is channeling $50 million in emergency support funding to Australian industries affected by the newly-imposed tariffs, and offering $1 billion in zero-interest loans to help develop new export opportunities beyond the US.

“Our government will always stand up for Australian jobs, Australian industry, Australian consumers and Australian values,” he said.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton described the Australia-US relationship as a “special relationship” but added that Mr Trump had not respected that by imposing the tariffs.

“I think this is a bad day for our country and it’s not the treatment that Australians deserve,” he said.

But Mr Dutton also suggested there would have been a different outcome if he was prime minister, as he would have been able to use his US contacts from the time he was in the former Coalition government to shore up more favourable treatment for Australia.

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I am sick to death of these weak and predictable responses from Anthony Albanese and other Australian leaders. We have world leaders taking decisive action on US tariffs but the best Albanese can muster is whining that the US is not being a good friend, Defence minister Marles moaning about a rules-based order and Dutton making alarming proposals for negotiating a defence deal.

Trump was democratically elected and has made his intentions clear, get over it. The US has only ever looked after itself and never been our friend unless it benefits them or leading us into highly destructive and unwinnable wars. Trump is a leader who is a dictator, a bully and a convicted criminal who disrespects laws and alliances. Despite our country’s sycophancy, he has done nothing for us and destroyed his country’s international relations forever. Trump is an economic illiterate. He has imposed tariffs, some as high as 90% which will have detrimental effects on his country’s growth and prosperity. His government is a proven liability with the US Defence secretary recently forwarding highly confidential and damaging war and security plans to a journalist. He has insulted international leaders including our own despite decades of cooperation with them including sharing top military secrets, allowing US military installations and troops who are currently operating on our shores, an FTA agreement that favours the US and a highly questionable $400 billion 30-year AUKUS agreement that in all likelihood the US is unlikely to reciprocate.

China, our largest trading partner has an economic advantage over the US on many fronts and is currently diversifying its industries in response. Our country has many international trade agreements in place. Our leaders need to get over Trump’s divisiveness and show a bit of backbone, getting on with the job of leading and strengthening alliances to benefit our country without the US.

I think they’re literally doing what you’re saying in your last paragraph.

Otherwise I don’t see the point in further escalation when Trump could drop this tomorrow. Trump’s tariffs aren’t going to work but they are going to cause a lot of pain in the US including heavily impacting his base and Trump is a physical and moral coward. I highly doubt Trump stays the course.

Also there really is no good solution because Trump is not a rational actor, he’s already implemented and rescinded tariffs on Canada multiple times and really compared to other countries Australia didn’t get the worst of it…I think Albo is right to play his cards close to his chest over tariffs that could be over as early as next week and I would bet certainly over by next year.

And isn’t Albo in caretaker mode anyway? So any response that may invite a reaction should come from the next PM (which hopefully will be him because Dutton will be absolutely useless in taking on Trump….kissing Trump’s butt rarely wins favours even if the orange overlord does demand it from so many).

For similar reasoning I don’t see the advantage in ripping up AUKUS even if it might be nerve wracking should we ever need to call on it. Personally I hope Australia learns from Ukraine and make ourselves impossibly costly to attack and therefore best left alone.

Albo and backbone will never happen

And yet it’s Peter Dutton who keeps flip flopping on every issue from Public Service WFH arrangements, to deportations. It’s as if the guy has no principles at all and will say whatever he thinks his audience wants to hear…. a bit like Trump.

@seano
The federal election was called just over a week ago. Trump was elected nearly six months ago and has made his intentions clear, he is a protectionist who does not support international agreements or alliances. Trump’s venom has also been directed towards Australia which he has been treating as an enemy. This is despite our country’s loyal and committed relationship with the US for nearly 100 years. Trump has also undermined NATO and threatened to invade friendly countries in order to achieve his goals.

Trump’s rhetoric and actions have changed the US’s standing in the world forever. I have watched other world leaders acting like leaders, being honest with their citizens when questioned by the media. Bleating the obvious, all we ever hear from Albanese is that the US is not being a good friend. Defence minister Marles is also disappointing, banging on about a rules-based order. Then there is Dutton, disturbingly suggesting that the government make a defence deal with the US, no matter what or how detrimental it is to our country, in order to bring down tariffs. How does Dutton’s narrative work when we have US defence facilities and troops provocatively stationed in our country and their weapons pointed towards other nations? Or America invading a country of one of our dear and loyal friends? We have the questionable $400 billion AUKUS deal, described as the worst deal in Australia’s history, which was negotiated by the Liberal government as a political wedge and later supported by Labor when they were elected.

I not expect our government to have all the answers but they do have a responsibility to be honest with its citizens, bring them into the fold rather than the weak and predictable responses we always hear from Albanese, his government and the opposition when they are questioned by the media.

We deserve better!

Futureproof is one of those contributors to this site who does not appear to put much knowledge or thought into his comments and I do wonder whether he has the capacity to do so; thinking past his political prejudices rather than subjecting us to the usual banal comments we always hear from him.

It was pleasing however to see seano’s meaningful contribution to my comment. Although I do not always agree with seano, he did provide a thoughtful comment which allowed me to sink my teeth into a response which I hope, was equally meaningful.

Thank you seano!

No one knew what Trump was going to do Jack, not for sure, not even many of his advisers and confidants.

I fail to see how escalating the situation helps Australia at all.

The Trump tariff layoffs have already started, the Trump recession won’t be too far behind.

The only Liberating the Diaper Don will be doing is liberating the poor and working class (including his base) from more cash which will be siphoned off to the wealthy in the form of tax cuts, and of course workers will be liberated from jobs as the supply chains break down.

And Temu Trump, Peter Dutton wants to mimic Trump polices here….hard pass.

Capital Retro2:55 pm 06 Apr 25

If Trump Derangement Syndrome was an Olympic Event you would win gold, Seano.

Trump pardoned a bloke who pled guilty to torturing a police officer with a taser (because was on video), he allowed musk to sack 83,000 veterans (leaving thousands more without services) and cancel research into childhood cancer & Alzheimer’s, Trump just issued the dumbest policy in 95 years that has virtually locked the US and the world into a recession or worse.

You know what you can do with your Trump Delusion Syndrome champ.

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