Global
stock markets crash as US trade war with China escalates
RT,
5
August, 2019
Escalation
of US-China trade tensions spooked investors as Wall Street opened
deep in the red on Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more
than 580 points, or around 2 percent, after the opening bell.
The
S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite were down 2 percent and 1.3
percent respectively.
US
stocks followed the downturn on the Asian markets. Japan’s
Nikkei declined 1.74 percent on trade tensions concerns, while Hong
Kong's Hang Seng fell 2.85 percent and China’s Shanghai Composite
closed 1.62 percent down.
European
stocks also tumbled on Monday with the FTSE 100, representing the
leading companies listed on the London Stock Exchange, down 2.78
percent. France's CAC 40 dropped by 2.26 percent and Germany's DAX
was trading more than 5 percent lower in late afternoon trading.
US
President Donald Trump took to Twitter Monday to call Washington’s
trade war rival China a currency manipulator after the renminbi
dropped below seven per dollar for the first time in over a decade.
China’s
national currency sank following Trump’s earlier threats to hit
Beijing with new tariffs in less than a month amid the escalating
trade standoff between the two world’s largest economies. The
president was quick to say that the move will eventually backfire on
China.
“It’s
called ‘currency manipulation,’” he
tweeted. “This
is a major violation which will greatly weaken China over time!”
It’s
not the first time Trump has slammed China for this, but the US
Department of Treasury refrained from officially labeling Beijing a
currency manipulator, placing it on the monitoring list instead.
Apart from China, the list now includes Japan, South Korea, Germany,
Italy, Ireland, Singapore, Malaysia, and Vietnam.
The
People’s Bank of China (PBOC), which is in charge of the yuan’s
exchange rate, blamed the weakening of the currency on the US’ own
actions, such as unilateral, protectionist measures, as well as the
expectation of additional tariffs on Chinese goods, according to
Xinhua. The central bank also said the yuan has strengthened 20
percent against the dollar over the past two decades.
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