US Tariffs: On April 2, when US President Donald Trump announced tariffs on countries around the world, then the global stock market was completely shaken. Arbo dollars suffered losses worldwide. The decline in American currency forced Trump to think again on his strategy. But in these adverse circumstances, there was a country that stood towards the rock with full strong challenges. That is India. The Indian stock market has not only fully compensated the loss since the tariff announcement, but has also gone up very much.
India is the only stock market in the whole world at the moment, where investors are in profit since April 2. Let us investigate the reason for the rest of the world’s stock markets compared to India. Since April 2, the Sensex and Nifty have seen a rise of about two and a half percent. If we look at the US dollars, the return of both these indexes is about 2 percent. At the same time, the rest of the markets of America, Europe and Asia are still in loss. & Nbsp;
Indian market compensation
If you talk about last week, during the five sessions of Karobi in Nifty, there has been a jump of about half and a half percent. Whereas in the Shanghai Composite Index of China, during this time, only 2 per cent and Japanese’s Nikkei index got a rise of just 1.3 per cent.
America’s S & amp; P 500 index has dropped 1.4 percent during the same period. Also, India is the only country in the world’s largest stock markets, where the stock market has now fully compensated the shock after April 2. If we talk about the world’s largest stock market, then since the announcement of Trump, the S & Amp; P 500 index has broken up to 7 percent and the Dow Jones Index has broken up to 6 percent.
Damage from America to Europe
Europe’s stock markets also have a similar situation. France’s CAC index has fallen by 7.5 percent and Germany’s DS index has fallen to 5.4 percent. Even the Asian markets have seen a decline. China’s CSI 300 index has broken 3.9 per cent since April 2, Hong Kand’s Hangsung Index 7.8 per cent and Taiwan’s stock exchange has broken up by 8.4 per cent.