
U.S. stocks roared back on Monday after the U.S. and China agreed to over the weekend in Switzerland, raising hopes a trade war won't push the economy into a recession.
The surged 1,160 points, or 2.8%, staying near its highs for most of the session with buying enthusiasm remaining strong. The popped 3.26%, bringing its gain since its April intraday low at the height of tariff pessimism to more than 20%. The benchmark has cut its year-to-date losses to just 0.6%.
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The added 4.35%, as the initial China agreement sent technology stocks tied to the country — like Tesla and Apple — flying higher. It was the best day since April 9 for all three indexes.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday that talks with China had been "very productive" and both countries had agreed to cut tariffs temporarily. U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods were brought down to 30%, and Chinese tariffs on U.S. imports were slashed to 10%. Bessent told C온라인카지노사이트's "" on Monday that he expects to meet once again with representatives from Beijing in the "" to start ironing out a bigger agreement.
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Tesla jumped 6%, while Apple and Nvidia gained 6% and 5%. Shares of companies that rely the most on Chinese goods rallied the most. popped 6%, climbed 8% advanced 8%.
"Markets are rallying because investors are surprised with the velocity of the Chinese trade tariff deal progress," said Jeff Kilburg of KKM Financial.
Tensions between China and the U.S. reached a fever pitch in April after President Donald Trump raised tariffs on China to 145%. Beijing then with 125% duties of its own targeting U.S. goods. The S&P 500 nearly closed in bear market territory last month — down almost 20% from a record set in February — following the "liberation day" announcement. Stocks then recovered as Trump dialed back the extra "reciprocal" rates on most countries outside of China in a 90-day pause.
Money Report
Investors have bet during the market comeback that the administration would be able to make trade deals over the next three months, including with China, and that has started to play out. The U.S. and the U.K. last week and now this week comes this preliminary China agreement, which turned out even better than traders expected.
Trump himself suggested China tariffs could be lowered to 80% if negotiations went well and a 60% number was reportedly being mulled over, much higher than 30% figure that resulted from the high stakes weekend talks. He noted on Monday that a finalized deal with Beijing would not come to fruition quickly.
"No one had these low China tariff rates on their bingo cards. This is a big positive surprise," said Jeff Buchbinder, chief equity strategist at LPL Financial. But "this is de-escalation, not a trade deal. More work remains to be done. A pause isn't permanent. China just got the same deal as all other countries."
Treasury yields as the China agreement was seen as taking a recession off the table for now. Plus, it made it less likely the Federal Reserve would cut rates anytime soon. Oil as recession fears cooled.
Defensive stocks where investors hid out during the tariff turmoil were lower on Monday. Coca-Cola and Philip Morris shed 2% apiece. lost 3%.
'Trump put is alive and well,' Bank of America says
Monday's market rally following the announcement of a could be evidence of a "," or the idea that the president would step in to restrain market declines, according to Bank of America.
"The recent news flow on trade suggests that de-escalation is likely to continue. The Trump put is alive and well," BofA senior U.S. economist Aditya Bhave wrote in a Monday note. "The administration is incentivized to avoid a recession, and more trade deals are likely forthcoming."
However, Bhave added that he believes the U.S.-China agreement and the Trump administration's recent signify that the announced on April 2 is "likely here to stay." On Sunday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said that the baseline tariff is expected "."
— Sean Conlon
Wall Street’s fear gauge falls back to pre-'Liberation Day' levels
The , also known at the Wall Street fear gauge, is back below 20 for the first time since March after the U.S. and China reached a on each other's goods.
The VIX was last near the 19 level on Monday after declining in the last few sessions. The last time the index was under the 20 level was on March 27, when it closed at 18.69, before Trump announced sweeping tariff announcements in early April.
The VIX had reached as high as 60.13 on April 7 as volatility soared on escalating tariff and trade tensions.
The VIX measures the move in call and put options and is considered the market's estimate of expected volatility in the S&P 500 stock index.
— Pia Singh
Tesla rejoins trillion dollar club with 6% rally Monday

shares jumped 6.6% Monday, putting the electric vehicle company back in the trillion dollar club.
If the stock closes the session above the threshold, it would mark its first time to rejoin the $1 trillion market cap club since Feb. 24.
The volatile stock is still down more than 21% on the year.
— Yun Li
China ETFs rise on temporary tariff cut
ETFs tied to China rallied on Monday as investors cheered the between the Asian country and the U.S.
The jumped more than 5%. The and the each added more than 3%.
Several Chinese-based companies that trade on the U.S. stock market also advanced. and both climbed more than 6%, while rose more than 5%.
— Alex Harring
Consumer discretionary stocks head for best day in over a month
The S&P 500 consumer discretionary sector rallied more than 5% after the U.S. and China agreed to temporarily lower tariffs. The gain put the sector on pace for its best one-day performance since April 9, when it surged 11.4%.
Carnival led the gains, rising 10%. Wynn Resorts and Williams-Sonoma both popped 8%, and Amazon jumped more than 7%.
— Fred Imbert
Challenges ahead for U.S.-China trade deal, says Bank of America

The agreement to reduce to 30% and cut China's tariffs on U.S. goods to 10% topped market expectations — but uncertainties remain, Bank of America said in a note Monday.
Negotiations will take time and there is a lack of clarity about the likelihood of reaching a long-lasting deal, economist Xiaoqing Pi wrote.
"As the two countries head into negotiations in months to come, we would expect, among its options, China may consider offering a stricter crackdown on fentanyl, more purchases of energy products and relaxing curbs on rare earth embargo, in exchange of further tariff reductions and technology sanction relaxation," Pi said. "In our view, the negotiations from here could become increasingly challenging, referencing to US trade deals with other trading partners."
-- Michelle Fox
Drugmakers reverse higher

Pharmaceutical stocks were bouncing back from earlier losses on Monday after an aimed at bringing down drug prices was deemed not as bad as feared for the industry.
First, there remains some skepticism about whether the rules could hold up to court challenges. Also, the final order included a new mechanism that would increase the ability for drugmakers to sell directly to consumers, bypassing pharmacy benefits managers.
The last added 1.7% in midday trading. jumped nearly 5%, while , and all rose more than 2%.
However, some pharmaceutical retailers slid given the part of the order establishing a platform for Americans to buy products directly, cutting out so-called middlemen. tumbled more than 4%, while fell more than 2%. On the other hand, rallied more than 7% as investors wondered if the company's direct-to-consumer model could benefit under this plan.
— Christina Cheddar Berk, Alex Harring
NRG Energy stock soars on $12 billion natural gas deal
Shares of soared nearly 20% after the power company struck a $12 billion deal to buy natural gas generation assets from LS Power.
The acquisition will double NRG's generation capacity to 25 gigawatts, the Monday. Natural gas is expected to play a central role in meeting rising power demand from AI data centers, re-industrialization in the U.S., and the electrification of the economy.
NRG sees the deal increasing the compound annual growth rate for its earnings per share to 14% over the next fives years, up from 10% previously.
Gordon Haskett analyst Don Bilson said NRG's bounce Monday is "a lot to ask" given that the company hit an all-time high on Thursday. Nevertheless, Bilson expects the deal will be well received by investors.
— Spencer Kimball
Tariffs on China won't go back to 145% even if 90-day pause ends without full deal, Trump says

President Trump said tariffs could go "substantially higher" if a full deal with China isn't reached during the 90-day pause, but not all the way back to the 145% level.
"At 145, you're really decoupling because nobody is going to buy," Trump said.
— Jesse Pound
Trade agreement will result in a 'fully open' China economy, Trump says
President Donald Trump said Monday said "it's going to take a while to paper" the deal with China but that the country has agreed to remove its non-monetary barriers to trade and "" to U.S. imports.
"They've agreed to open China — fully open China," Trump said.
Trump also characterized the talks with China as "friendly" and said he may speak to President Xi Jinping at the end of this week.
— Jesse Pound
Oil jumps more than 3% on hopes U.S.-China deal will spark economic rebound
Crude oil prices jumped more than 3%, after the U.S .and China agreed to slash tariffs temporarily, easing trade tensions between the world's two largest petroleum consumers.
was up $2.08, or 3.41%, to $63.10 per barrel. Global benchmark rose $2.06, or 3.22%, to $65.97 per barrel.
Traders are hoping that the U.S. and China will strike a broader, durable agreement that will reignite economic growth and boost crude demand.
Oil prices had plunged the l this month as President Donald Trump's global tariff regime raised the risk of a recession that would slow demand. At the same time, OPEC+ has agreed to to the market this month and next.
— Spencer Kimball
Stocks open higher
Stocks opened higher on Monday, with investor appetite for risk assets growing following a cooling of trade tensions between the U.S. and China.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 975 points, or 2.3%. The Nasdaq Composite popped 3.7%, while the S&P 500 added 2.7%.
— Brian Evans
Bessent says he expects to meet with China again in 'next few weeks'

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday said he expects to continue talks with China in the near-term to iron out a more concrete trade agreement.
"I would imagine in the we will be meeting again to get rolling on a more fulsome agreement," Bessent told C온라인카지노사이트's "" on Monday.
— Brian Evans
Nvidia, Best Buy, Eli Lilly among the stocks making moves premarket
Some stocks are making big moves before the opening bell on Monday:
- Big Tech stocks – Shares of megacap technology companies surged after the U.S. and China , bringing the U.S. tariff rate on Chinese imports down to 30% and China's duties on U.S. imports to 10%. , which has seen amid increasing competition from local automakers, rose more than 7% — as did . , which in China, gained more than 6%. and advanced more than 5% and more than 4%, respectively.
- Retail stocks – Retailers vulnerable to China tariffs soared following the agreement between the U.S. and China to suspend most levies. jumped 17%, rose 10% and rallied 11%.
- Pharma stocks – Shares of several drugmakers traded lower after President Donald Trump said on Sunday that he will sign an executive order Monday morning that would reduce prescription drug costs "" to match prices paid several by other countries. shares slid about 3%, while and shares each dropped more than 2%. Shares of and also each declined more than 2%.
Read the full list .
— Sean Conlon
Pharma stocks fall after Trump says order to lower drug costs coming

Pharmaceutical stocks fell broadly on Monday after President Donald Trump said he would sign an executive order that aims to lower drug costs "by 30% to 80%."
and lost more than 2% each. shed nearly 5%. and were both down more than 3% along with .
— Fred Imbert
Hong Kong stocks surge nearly 3% after U.S. and China unveil details of trade deal
Asia-Pacific markets rallied Monday after China and the U.S. , including a 90-day pause on tariffs and a drop in reciprocal tariffs by 115 percentage points.
Hong Kong stocks led gains in the region with the surging 2.98% to end the day at 23,549.46, while the Hang Seng Tech index advanced 5.16% to 5,447.35, their highest levels since March 27.
Meanwhile, mainland China's index increased 1.16% to end the day at 3,890.60.
Indian stocks also saw massive gains following the ceasefire between India and Pakistan over the weekend. The — the worst in nearly three decades — with both sides exchanging fire with missiles and drones.
The benchmark surged 3.49% while the BSE Sensex gained 3.38% as at 2. p.m. local time.
Japan's benchmark ended the day 0.38% higher at 37,644.26 while the broader Topix index added 0.31% to 2,742.08.
In South Korea, the index advanced 1.17% to close at 2,607.33 while the small-cap Kosdaq moved up 0.4% to 725.40.
Over in Australia, the benchmark pared gains to end the day flat at 8,233.50.
— Amala Balakrishner
U.S. and China suspend most tariffs in dramatic thawing of tensions

The U.S. and China on Monday agreed to suspend most tariffs on each other's goods in a move that shows a major thawing of trade tensions between the world's two largest economies.
The trade agreement means that "reciprocal" tariffs between both countries will be cut from 125% to 10%. The U.S.' will remain in place, meaning total tariffs on China stand at 30%.
"We had very productive talks and I believe that the venue, here in Lake Geneva, added great equanimity to what was a very positive process," U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a news conference.
— Sam Meredith
Trump to sign order aiming at lowering prescription drug costs

President Donald Trump said he will sign an executive order Monday morning to introduce "most favored nation" pricing model to lower U.S. prescription drug costs.
"I am pleased to announce that Tomorrow morning, in the White House, at 9:00 A.M., I will be signing one of the most consequential Executive Orders in our Country's history. Prescription Drug and Pharmaceutical prices will be REDUCED, almost immediately, by 30% to 80%," Trump said in a post on Truth Social Sunday.
The policy ties the amount the government pays for some medications to prices paid abroad. In other words, the U.S. would pay no more than the lowest prices paid by other wealthy countries.
"They will rise throughout the World in order to equalize and, for the first time in many years, bring FAIRNESS TO AMERICA! I will be instituting a MOST FAVORED NATION'S POLICY whereby the United States will pay the same price as the Nation that pays the lowest price anywhere in the World," Trump said.
— Yun Li
Chinese officials cite 'substantial progress' in trade talks

The Chinese officials who participated in the U.S. trade talks over the weekend
Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China He Lifeng said the meeting "achieved substantial progress and reached important consensus."
"The two sides agreed on establishing a consultation mechanism for trade and economic issues," Lifeng said.
China International Trade Representative Li Chenggang said no matter when a statement is released about a trade deal, it's going to be "big news" and "good news for the world."
— Yun Li