A newsletter designed to prepare you for the day, offering a concise summary of overnight developments and key events ahead that could influence your workday.
By Richard Fargose
May 13, 2025 at 1:32 AM IST
QUICK SNAPSHOT
Global Sentiment: Risk-on
Factors: US-China Trade Deal; India-Pakistan Tension
TODAY’S WATCHLIST
- India April CPI data
- US April Core CPI data
- Tata Motors, Bharti Airtel, Cipla earnings
THE BIG STORY
A sudden thaw in US-China trade tensions has sent a ripple of optimism through financial markets, with JPMorgan upgrading China’s growth forecast after what it called a “surprisingly positive” deal. Under the agreement, both nations will temporarily slash their punishing tariffs, offering a 90-day reprieve from the tit-for-tat duties that have strained the global economy. US levies on Chinese imports will drop from a staggering 145% to 30%, while China’s tariffs on US goods will fall from 125% to 10%. JPMorgan now sees China’s full-year GDP hitting 4.8%—a notable jump from its earlier 4.1% projection—and no longer expects Beijing to roll out additional fiscal stimulus.
But while the short-term relief has been welcomed, central bankers remain measured in their assessments of the economic fallout. Federal Reserve Governor Adriana Kugler acknowledged the temporary de-escalation as a clear improvement yet cautioned that even reduced tariffs at 30% are “pretty high” and could still dampen growth. Speaking in Dublin, she noted that the price impact and slowdown may be more subdued than initially feared, reducing the likelihood of imminent interest rate cuts by the Fed. For now, the world’s two largest economies appear to have stepped back from the brink—but policymakers and markets alike are keeping one eye on what happens when the 90-day clock runs out.
DATA
The US government recorded a $258 billion budget surplus in April, up 23% from a year earlier, driven by strong tax receipts and record-high tariff collections, according to the Treasury Department. Customs duties surged to $16 billion during the month—more than $500 million a day—amid sharply higher tariffs on Chinese goods and new levies on other imports. For the fiscal year to date, net customs duties reached $63 billion, a significant increase from $48 billion in the same period last year. In the first seven months of fiscal 2025, which commenced on October 1, the Treasury reported a budget deficit of $1.049 trillion, a 23% increase from the previous year, or $194 billion.
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
US stocks rallied sharply on Monday, with the S&P 500 hitting its highest level since early March after the US and China agreed to temporarily slash reciprocal tariffs – reducing US duties to 30% from 145% and Chinese levies to 10% from 125%. The S&P, Nasdaq, and Dow notched their best daily gains since 9 April, boosted by Apple’s 6.3% jump on iPhone pricing reports and NRG Energy’s 26.2% surge after a $12bn acquisition deal.
The 10-year US Treasury yield surged nearly 10 basis points on Monday, mirroring moves in German Bunds and UK gilts, as the US-China tariff truce reduced safe-haven demand for government debt. However, Citi analysts cautioned the rally might prove temporary, noting Trump's political base may oppose compromise and recalling how a similar 90-day ceasefire in 2018-2019 ultimately collapsed.
The US dollar surged on Monday after the US and China reached a temporary tariff-cutting deal, easing fears of a global recession. The dollar index jumped 1.5% to 101.91, while the euro dropped 1.54% to $1.1074, marking its steepest one-day fall since November 6. The trade breakthrough reinforced the greenback's dominance as investors moved back into safe-haven assets.
Brent crude oil prices rallied sharply on Monday, with Brent crude for June delivery jumping 1.9% to $65.10 per barrel−up from $57 a week ago level as traders reassessed recession risks following the US-China tariff truce. The rebound reflects easing demand concerns, though market participants remain wary of potential breakdowns in negotiations given the temporary 90-day nature of the agreement. Energy markets appear to be pricing in reduced but still-present trade war risks.
Day’s Ledger
Economic Data:
Corporate Action:
Policy Events
TICKERS
MUST READ