Here’s what my colleague market strategist Mike “Willo” Wilson says happened while we were sleeping… US stocks and dollar edged higher on Friday as traders grew optimistic that the Trump administration is making efforts to deescalate trade tensions. Australia’s first quarter CPI on Wednesday is expected to show further cooling, enough for an RBA rate cut in May. For New Zealand, a speech by Finance Minister Nicola Willis and ANZ business and activity data are the highlights. The Aussie and Kiwi had a quiet finish to last week, matched by a quiet start to this one. Voter discontent with Trump’s economic stewardship is sinking his popularity as he approaches the symbolic 100-day mark of his second term, ratcheting up pressure on congressional Republicans to pass his tax plan. Trump suggested Sunday that his sweeping tariffs would help him reduce income taxes for people making less than $200,000 a year. Read more about the 100 dizzying days of Trump. Eleven people were killed in Vancouver and dozens were injured after a driver plowed into a large crowd at a street festival on Saturday evening. The suspect, a lone 30-year-old Vancouver man, was arrested at the scene. Police said they are confident the incident wasn’t an act of terrorism and there’s no ongoing danger to the public. In 2025, a new atomic arms race is stirring, this time not provoked by Russia, China or North Korea — who have been ramping up their arsenals — but instead by Trump’s trade war, and his threats to withdraw the US defense umbrella. The result is a world growing more dangerous, not just for Asia, but for Americans too. |