Asia-Pacific markets fall after Trump’s tariffs on Indonesia

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This is CNBC’s live blog covering Asia-Pacific markets.

Asia-Pacific markets fell after U.S. President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he had struck a preliminary trade agreement

with Indonesia

, which will impose a 19% tariff on the country’s exports to the U.S.

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Indonesia’s central bank is set to release its policy decision later in the day.

Trump says Indonesia trade deal features 19% tariff; Jakarta yet to confirm

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President

Donald Trump

on Tuesday said he reached a preliminary trade deal with Indonesia, which will set a 19% tariff on the Southeast Asian country’s U.S. exports.

“We will pay no tariffs. So they are giving us access into Indonesia, which we never had,” Trump told reporters outside the White House.

“That’s probably the biggest part of the deal. And the other part is they are going to pay 19%,” he said.

Money Report

CNBC Daily Open: U.S. inflation meets expectations, but that’s not necessarily good

Trump says tariff letters for smaller countries coming soon; rates likely over 10%

It was not immediately clear if Jakarta had approved the deal terms as described by Trump. The Indonesian Embassy in Washington, D.C., did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

Read the full story

here

.


— Kevin Breuninger

Asia markets kick starts Wednesday trading lower

Asia markets started the trading day lower.

Japan’s benchmark

Nikkei 225

was flat at the open, while the Topix slipped 0.11% as of 8.04 a.m. local time (8.04 p.m. ET Tuesday).

South Korea’s Kospi lost 0.5% and the small-cap Kosdaq was 0.56% lower.

Australia’s

S&P/ASX 200

declined 0.82%.


— Lee Ying Shan

Opening calls from Singapore

Good morning from Singapore and happy mid-week. Asia markets are poised to open mixed. Japan’s benchmark

Nikkei 225

was set to open marginally lower, with the futures contract in Chicago at 39,660 while its counterpart in Osaka last traded at 39,600, against the index’s last close at 39,678.02.

Australia’s

S&P/ASX 200

was also set to start the day lower with futures tied to the benchmark at 8,545, compared with its last close of 8,630.3.

Futures for Hong Kong’s

Hang Seng index

, however, stood at 24,622, pointing to a stronger open compared to the HSI’s last close of 24,590.12.

Investors will be keeping an eye on Indonesian stocks after U.S. President

Donald Trump

on Tuesday said that he has reached a preliminary trade deal with Indonesia, which will impose a 19% tariff on the Southeast Asian country’s U.S. exports.


— Lee Ying Shan

Stock futures are little changed

Stock futures were little changed on Tuesday evening, with investors awaiting fresh corporate earnings and inflation data.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average pulled back 47 points, or 0.1%, while S&P 500 futures dipped 0.1%. Nasdaq 100 futures slipped 0.1%.


— Brian Evans

Trump-backed digital asset bills fall short in Congress, crypto-linked stocks slide

Several crypto-related legislative measures failed to beat

a key procedural hurdle

in the House of Representatives on Tuesday.

The vote came in at 196 to 223, with 13 Republican lawmakers siding with Democrats to block the procedural motion.

The vote comes after President Donald Trump encouraged Republican lawmakers to vote in favor of the measure. “The House will soon VOTE on a tremendous Bill to Make America the UNDISPUTED, NUMBER ONE LEADER in Digital Assets – Nobody does it better!” he wrote on Truth Social earlier Tuesday.

Crypto-linked stocks traded lower, with Circle Internet Group dropping 4% and Coinbase Global losing 1%. Bitcoin also slipped below the $117,000 threshold, dropping more than 2% on the day.



Erin Doherty, Darla Mercado

S&P 500, Dow end Tuesday in the red

The

S&P 500

dropped 0.4% on Tuesday to close at 6,243.76. The

Dow Jones Industrial Average

lost 436.36 points, or 0.98%, ending at 44,023.29.

The tech-heavy

Nasdaq Composite

was the only bright spot in Tuesday’s market. The Nasdaq rose 0.18% to settle the session at 20,677.80.


— Pia Singh

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