Morning Bid: Markets now eye government shutdown after trade row

By Mike Dolan

LONDON (Reuters) - What matters in U.S. and global markets today

By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Financial Industry and Financial Markets

From one crunch to another, markets are finding it hard to catch a break as we go from tit-for-tat trade wars one day to U.S. government shutdown fears the next.

Today I'll take a look at how all of the U.S. policy uncertainty and diplomatic upheavals have sparked a conversation in global investment circles about trust and transparency in U.S. governance and how eroding that could undermine the U.S. position as the world's dominant investment destination.

Find this and more on today's major market news below.

Today's Market Minute

* President Donald Trump threatened on Wednesday to escalatea global trade war with further tariffs on European Union goods,as major U.S. trading partners said they would retaliate fortrade barriers already erected by the U.S. president. * Germany's outgoing lower house of parliament will hold aspecial session on Thursday to debate a 500 billion euro fundfor infrastructure and sweeping changes to borrowing rules inEurope's largest economy to bolster defence. * The Bank of Canada trimmed its key policy rate by 25 basispoints on Wednesday to 2.75% and raised concerns aboutinflationary pressures and weaker growth stemming from tradeuncertainty and U.S. tariffs. * The Kremlin said on Wednesday it would review details fromWashington about a proposal for a 30-day ceasefire in Ukrainebefore responding, while U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubiohoped a deal would be struck within days. * U.S. consumer prices increased less than expected inFebruary, Wednesday data showed, but the improvement is likelytemporary against the backdrop of aggressive tariffs on importsthat are expected to raise the costs of most goods in the monthsahead.

Can't catch a break

This week's U.S. metal tariff hikes and the instant retaliation from Europe and Canada are likely only the opening salvos in a global trade conflict that President Donald Trump appears intent on ratcheting up in less than three weeks' time.

The rhetoric shows no sign of compromise.

"Whatever they charge us, we're charging them," Trump told reporters at the White House. "We will not stand idly by," Canada's Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc said of the latest tariffs moves.

There is background tension in Europe too as Germany's dramatic fiscal reforms and defence reboot now need to pass through parliament, with the Green Party's necessary support still not secured.

OK