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10 things you need to know in markets today

Here's what you need to know on Thursday.

just hours after the Trump administration made similar proposals

2. The escalating skirmish might just end up to Trump's benefit, according to Dutch bank ING. Raoul Leering, head of international trade analysis at Dutch bank ING, argued that Trump's actions — imposing a total of around $50 billion worth of tariffs on more than 100 products coming from China — may rally other countries around him, benefiting US trade outside of China.

5. Larry Kudlow, President Donald Trump's top economic adviser, told Fox Business that the brewing trade war with China would end in a "pot of gold."Kudlow also told reporters that China tariffs may not even go into effect as they are part of a negotiating tactic.

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6. The Facebook data of up to 87 million people were affected by the Cambridge Analytica scandal, the social network said on Wednesday.It's far more than previously thought, with earlier estimates putting it at around 50 million. In a conference call with reporters, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company had made a "huge mistake" by not recognizing its responsibilities.

7. JPMorgan's top banks analyst Kian Abouhossein said in a note Wednesday that Deutsche Bank needs to slash its US business.The US business consumes 20% of Deutsche Bank's capital, has 10,000 staff, and yet delivered a return on equity of less than 2% in 2017, according to Abouhossein. Deutsche Bank should slash its equities business and investment banking business, he said.

8. Italian state lender CDP will buy a stake of up to 5 percent in Telecom Italia, two sources close to the matter said on Thursday.The move is aimed at protecting the country's interests in the former phone monopoly, whose assets are considered strategic and where the top shareholder is France's Vivendi, with a stake of just under 24 percent.

9. Amid the volatility in February and March, a "single winner" emerged, according to Larry Hatheway, the head of investment solutions and chief group economist at GAM. "With the advent of two-way markets, where people who buy stocks can make money or lose money (which was largely absent in 2017), you're beginning to see investors focus on what can deliver hopefully reliable or predictable, perhaps less volatile performance," he told Business Insider.

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