Global stocks treaded with caution on Thursday, with Asian shares feeling the heat as U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff plans, geopolitical worries and a cautious stance from Federal Reserve policymakers hurt risk sentiment.
The risk-off mood lifted gold prices to a record high, while the safe-haven Japanese yen firmed to its highest level since early December against the dollar.
European futures FESX1! pointed to a muted open on Thursday, a day after the pan-European STOXX 600 index
SXXP dropped nearly 1%, its biggest daily drop in two months. Futures for S&P 500
ES1! and Nasdaq
NQ1! eased 0.3%.
Trump through the week has vowed tariffs on wide-ranging imports including pharmaceuticals products, semiconductor chips and lumber. He intends to impose tariffs on autos as soon as April 2.
That along with other threats has exacerbated fears of a broad trade war, leaving investors nervous, although some analysts see the moves by Trump as negotiating tactics.
Market jitters escalated on geopolitical worries after Trump alarmed European officials by denouncing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy as a “dictator”, amid U.S. talks with Russia to end the Ukraine war.
The yen USDJPY hit an over two-month high against the dollar and was last up 0.9% at 150.065 per dollar. The yen has risen more than 4% against the dollar this year boosted by rising odds of the Bank of Japan hiking rates again in 2025.
“Uncertainty about the Fed’s policy and Trump’s tariffs will continue to rattle markets and keep investors on edge, with no end in sight in the short term,” said Vasu Menon, managing director of investment strategy at OCBC Bank in Singapore.
“Investors must come to terms with the fact that volatility will be more elevated this year … There are valid reasons to remain sanguine about the investment outlook especially for those with the risk appetite and patience.”
In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei NI225 slid 1.5% on the strong yen, while a blistering rally in Chinese technology shares HHSTECH took a breather.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index HSI slipped 1.3%, having touched a four-month high earlier this week boosted by tech stocks in the wake of Chinese startup DeepSeek’s breakthrough.

Trump’s initial policy proposals raised concern at the Fed about higher inflation, with firms telling the U.S. central bank they generally expected to raise prices to pass along the cost of import tariffs, according to the Fed’s January meeting minutes released on Wednesday.
“Trump’s policies … no doubt added complexity to the Fed’s balancing act between inflation and employment, forcing policymakers to lean into a wait-and-see approach,” said Yeap Jun Rong, market strategist at IG.
“That said, with market expectations already well aligned for a rate hold over the next two FOMC meetings, the minutes served more as confirmation of existing sentiment.”
Traders are pricing in 39 basis points of cuts this year from the Fed with the next move fully priced in for September, LSEG data showed.
The dollar index DXY, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, eased 0.16% to 107.06. The euro
EURUSD was steady at $1.0428.
Gold prices rose to a fresh record high of $2,947.11 an ounce, reaching a new peak for the tenth time this year. The yellow metal GOLD is up 12% so far in 2025 after rising 27% last year, its strongest annual performance in over a decade.
Oil prices eased away from a one-week high while wheat extended gains to a fifth session to trade near its highest close since October, underpinned by worries that cold weather in Russia and the U.S. could damage the crop.