The White House is also wrestling with France on tariffs
After the market kicked off December on a sour note, Dow futures are now staring at an over 200-point drop, pivoting away from earlier gains after President Donald Trump'sremarks at a London news conference. Speaking ahead of a NATO meeting, Trump's noted he "like[s] the idea of waiting until after the [2020] election for the China deal,"casting doubt that a trade deal with Beijing will be reached ahead of the looming Dec. 15 deadline for tariff hikes. Elsewhere, Trump also took aim at France's new digital services tax, after the White House threatened yesterday it could impose duties of up to 100% on $2.4 billion worth of French imports.
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Stocks in Asia closed mostly lower, though they managed to pare much of their early deficits, with the Shanghai Composite coming all the way back to close in positive territory. The Chinese benchmark added 0.3% for the day, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng settled with a 0.2% loss, weighed down by disappointing retail data for October. Japan's Nikkei ended in the red, as well, dropping 0.6%, and South Korea's Kospi closed down 0.4%.
European indexes are moving lower today on heightened trade war fears. London's FTSE 100 is leading the sell-off with a 1.4% decline, putting the index on pace for its lowest close since mid-October. France's CAC 40 is also getting hit hard, last seen 0.7% lower, with luxury retailers in particular suffering big losses after Trump threatened more tariffs on the country's imports. The German DAX, meanwhile, has managed a 0.4% gain.