European Stocks Resume Selloff as Trump’s Tariffs Go Into Effect


(Bloomberg) — European stocks slumped as US President Donald Trump’s tariffs took effect, triggering a renewed selloff across global financial markets.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index extended declines, sinking 3.3% as of 11:03 a.m. in London, with all sectors in the red. Health care, energy and real estate stocks fell the most, while automakers, retail and media stocks were down less than the broader market.

European drugmakers slid after Trump said “a major tariff” on the industry would be coming soon. Novo Nordisk A/S fell 5.3%, Novartis AG dropped 7.1% and Roche Holding AG was down 6.4%.

Imports from the European Union will be taxed at a 20% rate under the latest tariffs, while levies imposed on China are now as high as 104%. The moves have shaken global markets and asset classes, with US government bonds sliding amid growing cracks in the haven status of Treasuries.

“This isn’t a buy opportunity yet,” said Frederique Carrier, head of investment strategy for RBC Wealth Management in the British Isles and Asia. “We’re waiting for some clarity on where tariffs will land, and the longer this goes on, the major risk of an accident in financial markets.”

Dominik Schmidlin, head of investment strategy and research at St. Galler Kantonalbank, said he expects more volatility over the coming weeks. “We are positioned defensively amid the current uncertainty with a slight underweight on equities.”

Trump’s sweeping tariffs are threatening to upend the global economic order and raising fears about a recession. After a record outperformance of US stocks in dollar terms in the first quarter, Europe’s benchmark index is now down for this year.

“The market is panicking, and for the right reasons,” said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo Markets. “This isn’t just about tariffs or FX — it’s about capital flows, geopolitics and fiscal sustainability colliding in real time.”

Here is what market participants are saying:

Laurent Lamagnere, head of development at Alphavalue

“There are concerns now that there could be very heavy losses among hedge funds seeking to unwind highly leveraged basis-trades. There’s a sense of panic in some areas of the market that that something systemic could happen should a major hedge fund fall while unwinding a big trade. There’s also speculation floating around that the Fed could intervene.”

Guillermo Hernandez Sampere, head of trading at asset manager MPPM

“The markets are providing a clear response to the current developments. In addition to the loss of assets, confidence is being severely strained. A reasonable solution is currently not in sight.”



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