
Most megacap and growth stocks rose in premarket trading, with Tesla adding 1.3%, and Amazon.com and Nvidia rising 2% each.
Since the reciprocal tariff announcement on April 2, concerns over a global trade war and fears of a recession in the US have gripped Wall Street, with the three major indexes hitting around one-year lows.
The Nasdaq confirmed a bear market on Friday, while the S&P 500 and the Dow are down more than 15% from their record-high closes.
The benchmark index neared bear market territory yesterday, before cutting some losses.
“A bounce was inevitable at some stage… the reason is we’ve had a very rapid fall and that equity investors are still hoping that representations from countries will attempt to try and strike a trade accord with America,” said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
Markets, however, continued to remain under a cloud of uncertainty after China said today it will never accept the “blackmail nature” of the US to Trump’s threat to ratchet up tariffs on imports from China to more than 100%.
This was in response to China’s decision to impose retaliatory tariffs to match ‘reciprocal’ duties the US president initially unveiled last week.
Dow E-minis were up 728 points, or 1.91%, S&P 500 E-minis were up 1.42% and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were up 214.5 points, or 1.22%.
Worries that the aggressive US tariffs could spur inflation and hamper global growth have led to greater pricing of interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
Traders see more than 96 basis points of easing by the December, implying three fully priced in 25-bps cuts and a 84% chance of a fourth such a reduction, according to LSEG data.
A consumer price inflation reading is also due on Thursday, which could offer more clues on the inflation trajectory.
Providing some cushion to US equities, Treasury yields eased, with those on the 10-year note slipping to 4.156% after surging more than 16 basis-points in the last session.
The CBOE Volatility index – seen as Wall Street’s ‘fear gauge’ – retreated to 42.35 points after rising to more than 60 yesterday – levels last seen back in August.
Among individual stocks, chipmaker Broadcom advanced 3.9% after the company said it was launching a new share buyback program of up to US$10 billion.
Health insurer UnitedHealth Group gained 5.8% after the US announced 5.06% increase in payment rates to private insurers for 2026 Medicare Advantage health plans.
Humana soared 11%, while Elevance Health also gained in low volumes.
CVS Health jumped 8%. The insurer named UPS executive Brian Newman as its CFO.