
Analysts from Grupo Financiero Ve por Más highlight that, despite this, the United States imposed an additional 10 percent tariff on Chinese goods. On the other hand, negotiations in Europe have led to increases in the main stock indices. Spain's IBEX 35 rises by 1.18 percent, reaching 12,350.14 points; France's CAC 40 increases by 0.64 percent, reaching 7,905.75 points; Germany's DAX gains 0.32 percent, standing at 21,474.76 units, while London's FTSE 100 loses 0.23 percent, reaching 8,564.19 points.
In the Mexican Stock Exchange, the S&P/BMV IPC shows an increase of 1.20 percent, reaching 51,822.2 points, and the flagship index of the Institutional Stock Exchange, the FTSE-BIVA, records a rise of 1.28 percent, standing at 1,047.29 points. Regarding the oil market, benchmark crude shows mixed variations with West Texas Intermediate (WTI) declining by 0.51 percent to $72.79 per barrel, and Brent increasing by 0.42 percent to $76.28 per barrel.
On Wall Street, the main stock indices operate again in positive territory after having registered setbacks due to tariffs imposed by Donald Trump. Investors are awaiting quarterly results from technology sector companies. The Nasdaq increases by 1.09 percent, standing at 19,608.19 points; the S&P 500 advances by 0.58 percent, at 6,030.72 units, and the Dow Jones stands at 44,443.49 points with an increase of 0.10 percent.
In a relevant quote, analysts state: "We expect the fear of an exacerbated trade war to partially moderate, after the President of the United States suspended the 25 percent tariffs on Mexican and Canadian products for 30 days."