Stocks flat after Trump-Zelenskyy meeting ends with security deal, and no ceasefire

Source Cryptopolitan

The Stocks market barely moved Monday after Donald Trump met for hours with Volodymyr Zelenskyy and a crew of European leaders in Washington and walked away with a $100 billion weapons pitch but zero truce.

According to data from CNBC, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 34.30 points, or 0.08%, closing at 44,911.82. The S&P 500 ended flat at 6,449.15, and the Nasdaq Composite ticked up just 0.03%, settling at 21,629.77.

Traders didn’t blink. They’re watching for Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole and retail earnings, not a drone wish list and more NATO drama.

Futures aren’t doing much either. The Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100 futures were all still. Meta Platforms and Microsoft were the only standouts; Meta fell 2.3% and Microsoft slipped 0.6%, dragging down the broader tech space.

But the real show was at the White House, where Trump and Zelenskyy skipped any ceasefire announcement and instead unveiled what looks like a military supply pipeline with Europe footing the bill.

Zelenskyy wants Patriots, drones, and U.S. security guarantees

At the White House, Zelenskyy gave Trump a detailed proposal during their meeting Monday. It includes a $100 billion plan to purchase American weapons, fully financed by European governments, in return for U.S. guarantees on Ukraine’s security once a peace deal is reached.

There’s also a $50 billion drone production plan, with joint manufacturing between U.S. and Ukrainian companies that have been developing drone tech since Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion.

The document doesn’t say what weapons are being requested, but Ukraine has already said it wants 10 U.S.-made Patriot missile systems to defend major cities and power infrastructure. The drone deal’s split between investment and procurement isn’t detailed.

What’s clear is the entire pitch was tailored to Trump’s interest in domestic industry. When asked if the U.S. would provide more military aid, Trump said, “We’re not giving anything. We’re selling weapons.”

Zelenskyy also used the document to push back on Trump’s new tone after the U.S. president met Vladimir Putin in Alaska just days earlier. Trump had originally supported a ceasefire, but changed course following that meeting, now favoring a full peace agreement with no preconditions. Zelenskyy’s message was the opposite, no progress without a ceasefire first.

Merz demands ceasefire while Kremlin mocks Trump

During the joint press appearance in Washington, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz told Trump directly:

“I can’t imagine that the next meeting would take place without a ceasefire. So let’s work on that and let’s try to put pressure on Russia because the credibility of these efforts we are undertaking today depends on at least a ceasefire.”

Ukraine echoed that view in the document and insisted that no deal should involve territorial concessions.

Kyiv is also demanding full financial compensation from Russia for damages from the war. The payment could come from the $300 billion in Russian sovereign assets that are currently frozen in Western jurisdictions. Any sanctions relief, according to Ukraine, must be tied to Russia complying with the future agreement and being willing to “play fair.”

Meanwhile, over in Moscow, Russian state media ran coverage that showed how little Putin’s circle thinks of Trump. Prominent Kremlin talk show host Vladimir Solovyov laughed off Trump’s threats and said Russia could “destroy the U.S. with nuclear weapons.” The clips were meant to show the Kremlin’s view that the U.S. president lacks serious leverage.

In any case, markets have now turned their focus to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s annual speech at the central bank’s Jackson Hole summit. Fed funds futures are pricing in a roughly 83% likelihood that the central bank cuts rates at its next policy meeting in September, according to CME’s FedWatch tool.

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