Gold rises as markets await US tariffs; Heathrow airport was warned about power supply in days before closure – business live

Importance Score: 57 / 100 🔵

European stock sell-off gathers pace as pharma shares slide

The sell-off in European stock markets has gathered pace, and pharmaceutical stocks are among the biggest fallers ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff announcement later today.

The Stoxx 600 healthcare index fell as much as 2.5% to its lowest level since December.

Analysts said US tariffs this time round could focus on the pharmaceutical sector.

Germany’s Bayer and France’s Sanofi dropped by 4.7% and 3.3% respectively. In the UK, AstraZeneca fell by 2.4% and GSK lost 3.3%.

The FTSE 100 index in London has lost 48 points, or 0.55%, to 8,587. Germany’s Dax is trading 1% lower while France’s CAC has lost 0.35% and Italy’s FTSE MiB is 0.77% down.

Gold has risen by around 0.5% is hovering near the record high hit yesterday.

Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said:

It’s not surprising that pharma stocks have been caught up in this wave of nervousness.

Investors are on tenterhooks as the clock ticks down what’s expected to be the biggest wave of tariffs on US trading partners. It’s been dubbed Liberation day by president Trump, but it’s more like entrapment day, with more countries set to be tangled up in a web of fresh duties.

The internationally focused FTSE 100 is on the back foot in early trade as concerns swirl about the effect on growth prospects for economies around the world. Wall Street made some tentative moves of recovery after the week’s early losses, a trend likely to continue later. But a pattern of one step forward, two steps back has been emerging as hopes for more leniency in trade policy keep being dashed, and the Trump administration seems intent on playing hardball.

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Key events

US factory orders rose by 0.6% in February, according to official figures from the Census Bureau.

This was slightly better than the 0.5% rise expected by Wall Street, and came after an upwardly revised 1.8% increase in January.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones, S&P 500 and Nasdaq indices have dipped by around 0.2%, ahead of the announcement from Donald Trump on new tariffs in a few hours’ time.

Manufacturing orders rose 0.6% in Feb to $594B. Shipments up 0.7%, inventories up 0.1%. Transportation and chemical goods led growth. Unfilled orders grew slightly. Positive momentum continues. #Manufacturing pic.twitter.com/I0sYxcNjLD

— Econoday, Inc. (@Econoday) April 2, 2025

US Factory Orders:

m/m +0.6% (est +0.5%, last +1.8% from +1.7%)
m/m ex Transportation +0.4% (est +0.4%, last +0.3% from +0.2%)

Factory orders remain solid, but largely due to a frontloading made in first 2 months to avoid tariffs in my view… pic.twitter.com/xqRfdSRhgd

— Mario Cavaggioni (@CavaggioniMario) April 2, 2025

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source: theguardian.com


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