Wall Street points lower
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1hon MSN
Early trading on Wall Street was quietly mixed as markets shift their attention toward a deluge of corporate earnings reports.
Tokyo stocks edged up Tuesday morning, helped by Wall Street gains overnight, but the rise was capped by higher Japanese long-term interest rates. The 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average rose 47.66 points,
Foreign investors bought Japanese stocks for 13 straight weeks to June 27, their longest buying spree since 2013, data from Japan Exchange Group showed.
Wall Street's major indexes closed sharply lower on Monday, after U.S. President Donald Trump announced hefty tariffs against Japan, South Korea and other trading partners while Tesla shares sank after CEO Elon Musk said he was forming a new U.
US stocks fell Monday as President Donald Trump announced a flurry of tariffs on countries including Japan, South Korea and South Africa.
Wall Street was relatively quiet with major indexes ticking up modestly as the Trump administration seeks to win more favorable deals with global trading partners
Taiwan’s TSMC plans to delay its chip plant project in Japan and prioritize operations in the United States to avoid tariffs imposed by President Trump, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday. However, TSMC said in a statement that its investment plans in the U.S. would not impact existing investment plans in other regions.