China, stock futures
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Stock futures were little changed in overnight trading following a big rally, as investors look ahead to a key inflation report Tuesday morning. Futures on the Dow Jones Industria
Stock futures rose Sunday after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said “substantial progress” was made in trade negotiations with Chinese officials, potentially thawing tensions kickstarted by Trump’s escalating tariff policy.
Stocks looked set for losses on Tuesday as investors locked in their gains from a stellar trading session. Signs of thawing trade tensions between the U.S. and China sparked an eye-popping rally Monday.
Stock futures on Wall Street surged Sunday evening as the US cited "substantial progress" in trade negotiations with China, raising hopes of a potential deescalation in tensions between the world’s two largest economies.
Stocks are soaring Monday as investors cheer weekend talks that saw China and the U.S. agree to slash tariffs on each other for at least 90 days. Data indicate that institutions were already lagging behind the stock-market bounce that had seen the S&P 500 take back much of its post-April 2 selloff,
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FIIs added 78,532 long contracts and covered 29,899 shorts, boosting their net long position by 108,431 contracts, taking the long-short ratio up from 1.88 to 1.94.
US stock futures are trading marginally in the red after a strong rally on Monday, marking their best single-day gain since April 9, which was the day US President Donald Trump announced a pause to his reciprocal tariff program for 90 days.
FTSE 100 futures are down 0.3%, following a rally across European stocks yesterday, albeit one that lagged the US following the progress made on US-China tariffs. The pound is stronger, up by 0.2% versus the dollar and holding close to $1.
Already positive stock markets took another big step higher as DJIA futures soared 940 points, S&P 500 futures jumped 2.8% and Nasdaq 100 futures jumped 3.6%.