The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 09, 2025
Today: April 09, 2025

'Tariff avoiders' among surprise bright spots dappling Europe markets

A drone view of shipping containers at Dublin Port, in Dublin
April 03, 2025
Alun John, Lucy Raitano - Reuters

By Alun John and Lucy Raitano

LONDON (Reuters) - Shares of surprise tariff avoiders like pharmaceuticals and drinks firms and rate-sensitive stocks such as real estate were among the few to post gains in Europe on Thursday, as fears of a global recession sent wider markets tumbling.

The broad STOXX 600 dropped to its lowest in two months and was last down 1.2%, but U.S. index futures fell more, around 3%, as President Donald Trumpโ€™s drastic trade tariffs sent investors out of stocks into the safety of bonds and gold. [MKTS/GLOB]

The euro itself roared higher, heading for its biggest one-day rise in almost a decade, up over 2.5% at one point at $1.1147, as investors dumped dollars.

Among the gloom in the stocks world, surprise bright spots appeared, particularly in those sectors where investors had been bracing for high tariffs, but did not see their worst fears materialise.

European spirit makers were expected to see large tariffs after a social media post from Trump last month suggesting as much. After they avoided any particularly special harsh treatment, however, shares rose on Wednesday.

Diageo and Davide Campari were up over 2%, rebounding after recent tumbles.

"The scale of tariffs for spirits stocks is less than feared," Citi analysts said, adding that markets had anticipated around 25% tariffs on the sector.

Pharmaceuticals also posted gains. British drugmakers GSK and AstraZeneca each rose over 1% after Trump spared pharmaceutical products from wide-ranging reciprocal tariffs.

GlaxoSmithKline has an estimated 52% revenue exposure to the U.S. and AstraZeneca 40%.

To be sure, analysts say neither pharma nor spirit makers are out of the woods yet, with potential for future additional tariff announcements as well as the impact of the overall hit to growth from tariffs, but the reprieve would help shares in the short term.

Other rare gainers in Europe were traditional defensive sectors, such as real estate up 2.2%, set for their biggest daily percentage gain since mid January.

Real estate stocks are sensitive to interest rates, and the rush to the safety of government bonds pushed Germany's 10-year bond yield down 7 basis points to its lowest in a month. [GVD/EUR]

The second best sectoral performer in Europe was utilities, up 1.75% at their highest since 2008, benefiting from a flight to safety effect since they rely little on either imports or exports.

(Reporting by Alun John and Lucy Raitano; Editing by Amanda Cooper and Ed Osmond)

Related

Business|Economy|Fashion and Beauty|Lifestyle|Political|US

Your 10-step Korean skincare routine could change with tariffs

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Energy demand erodes in face of global economic slowdown as trade war intensifies

Business|Economy|Political|US

The Latest: Trumpโ€™s latest round of tariffs go into effect

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Trump is trying to reshape the global economy. It seems in open rebellion against his tariffs

Local

News|Local

San Bernardino operation makes progress to combat violence and theft

Local|News

FDA crackdown on 'poppers' triggers supply rush

Local|Health

What are 'poppers' and why is the FDA cracking down on them?

Local|News|WrittenByLAPost

4 killed, 2 injured in Santa Ana crash, including 2 sets of sisters

Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Fashion and Beauty|Lifestyle|Political|US

Your 10-step Korean skincare routine could change with tariffs

Your 10-step Korean skincare routine could change with tariffs
Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Energy demand erodes in face of global economic slowdown as trade war intensifies

Energy demand erodes in face of global economic slowdown as trade war intensifies
Business|Economy|Political|US

The Latest: Trumpโ€™s latest round of tariffs go into effect

The Latest: Trumpโ€™s latest round of tariffs go into effect
Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Trump is trying to reshape the global economy. It seems in open rebellion against his tariffs

Trump is trying to reshape the global economy. It seems in open rebellion against his tariffs

Economy

Economy|Health|Political|Science|US

USDA to lose bird flu response employees, source says

USDA to lose bird flu response employees, source says
Business|Economy|Europe|Political|World

From juice to jewellery: which U.S. goods will EU hit with tariffs?

From juice to jewellery: which U.S. goods will EU hit with tariffs?
Business|Economy|Political|Technology|US

Tariff anxiety boosted first-quarter personal computer shipments, Canalys says

Tariff anxiety boosted first-quarter personal computer shipments, Canalys says
Business|Economy|Europe|Finance|Stock Markets

Corporate credit tremors in aftershock of tariff-led stock rout

Corporate credit tremors in aftershock of tariff-led stock rout

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In