United States future rates operate on Friday (4) after the tariff plan announced by President Donald Trump causes the highest retraction in the American stock markets in five years. Amid the escalation of global commercial tensions, the expectation for the disclosure of the monthly job report (Payroll) and the long -awaited speech by Federal Reserve President Jerome Powell today investors show risk aversion and adopt a more defensive stance.
Non-agricultural payrolls are expected to show that the US has created 135,000 jobs, a slight deceleration compared to February.
United States
Investors now evaluate whether countries will be able to enter into agreements with the United States to mitigate the rates in force. On Thursday, Donald Trump signaled openness to commercial negotiations-a tone change in relation to previous statements by members of his government, who had been adopting a more adamant stance.

See the performance of future markets:
- Dow Jones Future: -0.79%
- S&P 500 Future: -0.51%
- NASDAQ FUTURE: -0.17%
Asia-Pacific
Asia-Pacific markets closed with low, following the sharp losses on Wall Street after US President Donald Trump’s fares shocked global markets.
Hong Kong and China markets are closed due to the Qingming festival.
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- Shanghai Se (China), closed by holiday
- Nikkei (Japan): -2.75%
- Hang Seng Index (Hong Kong): Closed by holiday
- Kospini (South Korea): -0.86%
- ASX 200 (Australia): -2.44%
Europe
European markets operate in the red, expanding the eve losses, with investors still recovering from the US tariff scale announced this week.
The European Union said on Thursday that it will adopt contracted against the United States if negotiations do not advance.
French President Emmanuel Macron has asked the country’s companies to suspend planned investments on American soil. Already the interim minister of the economy of Germany, Robert Habeck, stated that Trump would “give in to pressure” if Europe has a unified response.
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- Stoxx 600: -1.64%
- DAX (Germany): -1.74%
- FTSE 100 (UK): -1.25%
- CAC 40 (France): -1.27%
- FTSE MIB (Italy): -3.17%
Commodities
Petroleum prices operate in a heavy fall and walk to register the worst week in months due to new US President Donald Trump, feeding concerns about a global trade war that could weigh on demand for oil.
- Oil WTI, -2.82%, to US $ 65.06 the barrel
- Brent oil, -2.77%, at $ 68.20 the barrel
Bitcoin
- Bitcoin (BTC), +2.93% to US $ 84,418.60 (compared to the quotation 24 hours ago)
(With Reuters and Bloomberg)
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