US and European stocks advanced yesterday and Treasury yields rose as investors absorbed a ruling by the US Supreme Court striking down President Trump’s tariffs, while also parsing a weak GDP report and higher-than-expected inflation data.
All three major US stock indexes moved higher immediately following the Supreme Court’s decision. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are on track to notch weekly gains, while the blue-chip Dow is currently flat versus last Friday’s close.
Europe’s STOXX 600 index extended gains following the ruling while gold prices came off the day’s highs in the immediate aftermath. The Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling struck down Trump’s sweeping tariffs enacted under a law meant for use in national emergencies, and has widespread implications for the global economy.
“There’s a belief that tariffs have actually hurt the economy, and maybe we see that in these weak GDP numbers that we got earlier today,” said Tim Ghriskey, senior portfolio strategist at Ingalls & Snyder in New York. “And tariffs play right into that, hurting the US especially in global trade.”
“Striking down of these tariffs will benefit corporate bottom lines, corporate earnings,” Ghriskey said, adding that the decision “has ramifications across the economic spectrum but there’s got to be a lot of disruption, and we’ll have to see the reaction from the White House.”
Before Wall Street’s opening bell, the Commerce Department released its advance take on fourth-quarter GDP, which showed the US economy grew at a sharply decelerated 1.4 per cent on a quarterly annualised basis in the last months of 2025. Its separate Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, the inflation gauge favoured by the US Federal Reserve, revealed price growth heated up in December.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 122.76 points, or 0.25pc, to 49,517.92, the S&P 500 was up 41.24 points, or 0.60pc, at 6,902.84 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 234.12 points, or 1.03pc, to 22,915.65.
European stocks jumped on the heels of the Supreme Court ruling, and remained on course for weekly gains on an improving corporate earnings outlook, while geopolitical turmoil remained on investors’ radar. MSCI’s gauge of stocks across the globe rose 5.06 points, or 0.48pc, to 1,052.27. The pan-European STOXX 600 index advanced 0.78pc, while Europe’s broad FTSEurofirst 300 index rose 19.55 points, or 0.78pc. The emerging market stocks index added 3.41 points, or 0.22pc, to 1,566.75. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan closed higher by 0.17pc, at 802.57, while Japan’s Nikkei fell 642.13 points, or 1.12pc, to 56,825.70.
Gold prices jumped as the soft GDP report offset hot inflation data, but pared those gains slightly after the tariff ruling. Even so, rising US-Iran tensions continued to support demand for the safe-haven metal. Spot gold was up 0.78pc at $5,037.73 an ounce. US gold futures advanced 1.6pc to $5,055.50 an ounce.
US Treasury yields rose following the Supreme Court’s ruling. The yield on benchmark US 10-year notes added 1.9 basis points to 4.094pc, from 4.075pc late on Thursday. The 30-year bond yield rose 3.1 basis points to 4.7352pc from 4.704pc late on Thursday. The two-year note yield, which typically moves in step with interest rate expectations for the Federal Reserve, rose 0.8 basis points to 3.478pc, from 3.47pc late on Thursday.
The dollar turned lower after the top US court’s tariff decision, but was still on track for its biggest weekly gain since October. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, fell 0.15pc to 97.74, with the euro up 0.1pc at $1.1784. In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin gained 0.65pc to $67,349.65. Ethereum rose 0.38pc to $1,955.40.
Crude prices eased but were poised to log a weekly gain on rising tensions between the United States and Iran. US crude fell 0.33pc to $66.21 a barrel and Brent fell to $71.36 per barrel, down 0.42pc on the day.
Meanwhile, stock markets in the UAE declined yesterday as investors weighed growing geopolitical tensions.
Abu Dhabi’s benchmark index slipped 0.3pc, pressured by a 2.6pc decline in real estate heavyweight Aldar Properties and a 1.4pc decrease in Agility Global . Aldar Properties said it had issued $1 billion in subordinated hybrid notes to Apollo Global Management through a private placement.
However, agro-food investor Invictus jumped 1.6pc after the firm recorded a 34pc increase in its full-year profit to 225.9 million dirhams ($61.51m). Dubai’s main market closed 0.3pc lower; Dubai Islamic Bank fell 2.2pc and top lender Emirates NBD Bank dropped 0.7pc.