US Stocks Notch Fresh Record as Trump Reaches Deal With Japan

The record-breaking rally in US equities continued on Wednesday as President Donald Trump reached a trade deal with Japan and investors geared up for the first round of big tech earnings later today.

The S&P 500 Index advanced 0.4% at 9:40 a.m. in New York, continuing to build on a rally that set a fresh record at the beginning of the week. The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index was mostly unchanged, with chipmakers weighing on the benchmark.

“Markets are digesting the Asian euphoria from the Japan Deal, but a lot of crosscurrents under the surface are being watched,” said JonesTrading’s Dave Lutz, highlighting the momentum rotation into value as well as renewed meme-like surges in high short-interest stocks.

Trump’s trade deal with Japan will impose 15% tariffs on imports including automobiles, while creating a $550 billion fund to make investments in the US. As a result of the agreement, which came after Trump brokered breakthroughs in a Oval Office meeting on Tuesday, will spare Japan from a 25% tariff that was set to kick in next week.

“They got the 15% rate because they were willing to provide this innovative financing mechanism,” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, when asked whether other trading partners could get a similar reciprocal levy.

record run

There is still much to do on the trade front for Trump though. The European Union is planning to quickly hit the US with 30% tariffs on some €100 billion worth of goods in the event no deal is reached between the two sides and if Trump follows through with his threat to impose that rate on the bloc’s exports.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists expect the US baseline “reciprocal” tariff rate to rise from 10% to 15%, with a 50% levy on copper and critical minerals. That threatens to fuel inflation and weigh on economic growth.