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    3. >Trading Day: A welcome dose of AI, tariff relief
    Finance

    Trading Day: A welcome dose of AI, tariff relief

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on February 24, 2026

    5 min read

    Last updated: February 24, 2026

    Trading Day: A welcome dose of AI, tariff relief - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:Artificial IntelligencecurrenciesBonds

    Quick Summary

    Stocks rebounded as AI fears cooled and a 10% tariff move lifted sentiment. Markets now eye Nvidia’s earnings; FX and bonds shifted notably, with yuan strength and a flatter U.S. curve.

    Table of Contents

    • Market Recap and Key Themes
    • AI developments lift beaten‑down stocks
    • Thomson Reuters jumps 11.5%
    • Trump’s tariff turnaround
    • Global reaction to tariff shifts
    • Yuan momentum builds
    • Onshore yuan’s biggest rise this year
    • Policy intervention likely caps gains
    • What could move markets tomorrow?
    • Author’s views and Reuters Trust Principles

    Trading Day: AI optimism and tariff reprieve buoy stocks Tuesday

    ORLANDO, Florida, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Stocks rebounded on Tuesday, lifted by a sense that recent fears around AI disruption were overdone, as investors also digested a surprise tariff reduction from U.S. President Donald Trump and looked forward to tech giant Nvidia's earnings.

    More on that below. In my column today I look at why, although U.S. equity markets are lagging their global peers, the 'Sell America' narrative may just be hot air - the numbers show that foreign purchases of U.S. assets have never been higher.

    If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.

    1. Anthropic touts new AI tools weeks after legal plug-inspurred market rout 2. Nvidia results are AI market's biggest test amidcompetitive worries 3. New US tariffs come in at lower 10% rate 4. Next Fed move a hike? Bostic's parting shot raisesalarm: Mike Dolan 5. Japan PM voiced concerns about further rate hikes toBOJ, Mainichi reports

    Market Recap and Key Themes

    Today's Key Market Moves

    * STOCKS: Taiwan, South Korea +2.5% to new peaks. Brazil'sBovespa hits fresh high too, 200,000 points in sight. WallStreet rebounds strongly, S&P 500's technical support at 100-DMAholds firm again. * SECTORS/SHARES: Nine S&P 500 sectors rise - tech,consumer discretionaries, industrials and utilities up more than1%. Healthcare and energy fall. Philadelphia semiconductor indexposts record high close. AMD +9%, Intel +6%, Salesforce +4%, IBM+2.7%. * FX: USD/CNY lowest in almost a year, JPY the biggestdecliner in G10 FX on PM Takaichi comments. Bitcoin falls below$63,000 but recovers. * BONDS: Treasuries slip at the short end, weighed by softtwo-year auction. 2s/10s curve flattens for 10th day in a row,something not seen in over 10 years. Spain's syndicated 30-yearbond sale draws record demand. * COMMODITIES/METALS: Oil -1% on U.S.-Iran deal hopes.Gold -2%.

    Today's Talking Points

    * Pause for breath

    AI developments lift beaten‑down stocks

    The gloom that has hung heavily over U.S. stocks lifted a bit on Tuesday as investors looked on AI lab Anthropic's latest new technology plug-ins, targeting industries such as investment banking and HR, in a more tolerant and favorable light.

    Thomson Reuters jumps 11.5%

    Shares that had been crushed, partly by Anthropic's recent AI tool launches, clawed back some losses - Thomson Reuters jumped 11.5%, the biggest rise since 2008. But don't get too excited. The S&P 500 software and services index, which has lost over 20% in less than four weeks, rebounded only 1%. Hardly a sign investors are desperate to get back in.

    Trump’s tariff turnaround

    * Trump's tariff turnaround

    A timeline: On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against most of President Donald Trump's tariffs, prompting him to sign an order imposing temporary 10% global tariffs; On Saturday, Trump said he would raise this to 15%; On Monday, that was lowered back to 10%, although Trump is still looking to increase it to 15%.

    Global reaction to tariff shifts

    Confused? You should be. Policymakers around the world are trying to make sense of it too - officials in Europe, Japan, Britain and elsewhere have said they hope the trade deals they struck with the U.S. last year will be honored. But will they? Perhaps Trump will provide more clarity around his intentions in the State of the Union address to Congress later on Tuesday.

    Yuan momentum builds

    * Yuan way traffic

    Onshore yuan’s biggest rise this year

    The bullish momentum behind China's yuan is quite something. The onshore yuan on Tuesday clocked its biggest rise against the dollar this year, rising for an eighth consecutive trading session. That's its longest winning streak since April, 2024. The last time it rose nine days in a row was September, 2010.

    Policy intervention likely caps gains

    Much of Tuesday's move was down to the market re-opening after Lunar New Year holiday. The trend is clear. Interestingly, however, Beijing is likely still intervening heavily to limit the currency's upside, recycling record trade surplus inflows into foreign assets, including Treasuries.

    What could move markets tomorrow?

    What could move markets tomorrow?

    * Australia CPI inflation (January) * Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Michele Bullock speaks * Japan service sector PPI inflation (January) * Thailand interest rate decision * European Central Bank board members * Euro zone inflation (January, final) * Germany GfK consumer sentiment (March) * Germany GDP (Q4, detailed) * Nvidia reports Q4 earnings (after closing bell) * U.S. Treasury sells $70 billion of five-year notes atauction * U.S. Federal Reserve officials scheduled to speak includeRichmond Fed President Thomas Barkin, Kansas City Fed PresidentJeffrey Schmid, and St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem

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    Author’s views and Reuters Trust Principles

    Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

    (By Jamie McGeever;)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Global equities rebounded as AI disruption fears eased, led by semiconductor gains.
    • •Trump trimmed new global tariffs to 10% after a court setback, though 15% remains possible.
    • •Nvidia’s upcoming earnings are a key test for the AI-driven market rally.
    • •Despite ‘Sell America’ chatter, foreign buying of U.S. assets is hitting record highs.
    • •Yuan strengthened and the U.S. yield curve flattened as sector moves diverged.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Trading Day: A welcome dose of AI, tariff relief

    1What is the main topic?

    Markets rebounded as AI disruption fears eased and a new 10% U.S. global tariff shaped risk sentiment, with investors focused on Nvidia’s upcoming earnings.

    2Why did AI-related shares bounce?

    Investors reassessed recent fears after Anthropic’s new enterprise tools were viewed as complementary rather than purely disruptive, lifting software and chip names.

    3How do tariffs factor into the market outlook?

    A shift to a 10% global tariff reduced near-term uncertainty versus higher rates, but policy direction remains fluid and could change again, keeping trade risk elevated.

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