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Stocks Hit New Highs After U.S. Removes China’s Currency Manipulator Label

Published 01/14/2020, 12:01 AM
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With the signing of the phase one trade deal mere days away, the U.S. said that it would remove China from a list of countries that it considers as currency manipulators, helping boost optimism on Wall Street and sending the stock market to yet another record high on Monday.

The decision to remove China as a currency manipulator, first reported by Bloomberg, comes almost half a year after the Treasury Department first made the formal designation last August.

With the phase one deal fast-approaching—it’s scheduled for signing on Wednesday—the concession from the U.S. helped boost the stock market higher and maintain its momentum from last week.

Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite indexes yet again hit new record highs, rising by 0.70% and 1.04%, respectively. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.30%, after surpassing the 29,000 mark for the first time last Friday.

After a lengthy translation and legal process that has taken several weeks, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Sunday that this will be “a very, very extensive agreement” and that China’s commitments in the phase one deal remain unchanged.

But while the U.S. is making another concession, on China’s end, the news isn’t as promising and much remains to be determined: The South China Morning Post reported on Monday that the Chinese government said the trade war is “not over yet” and that the phase one deal is “just the first round of a game.”

“Skepticism is going to grow that we won’t see China uphold all the terms of the deal,” says Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda. “Markets are content that in the short term, at least we’re not going to have a spiraling of tariffs that will derail the global growth outlook.”

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Crucial quote:

“Right now we’re still seeing record highs because expectations are that Federal Reserve policy will stay consistent, and we’re probably going to see some return to earnings growth in the first quarter of 2020,” Moya says. “The phase one deal also has a lot more juice than many people anticipated—and that’s another reason why we’re seeing this continued success with U.S. stocks.”

Tangent: Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) were among the stocks making the biggest gains on Monday. Tesla shares, leading the Nasdaq higher, rose by almost 10% and surged past the $500-per-share mark for the first time. Tesla stock has now risen over 25% in the first two weeks of 2020 alone. Apple stock was the Dow’s best performer, rising more than 2% and continuing its momentous rally from 2019, when it rose by a whopping 86%. The stock, which hit numerous new record highs in recent months, has doubled in the past year.

Key background: The phase one trade deal between the U.S. and China that was agreed upon last month will reportedly reduce existing tariffs and increase Chinese purchases of American farm products. Other promised purchases include energy and manufactured goods, while the deal will also resolve some disputes over intellectual property. That helped the stock market rally to new all-time highs after Trump confirmed the phase one agreement and crucially averted a looming December 15 tariff deadline.

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