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Dow set to tumble 1,500 points after China retaliates against Trump's tariffs

Dow set to tumble 1,500 points after China retaliates against Trump's tariffs

CNN04-04-2025

US stocks were set to plunge Friday after China retaliated against the United States for President Donald Trump's tariffs.
Dow futures fell 1,500 points, or 3.7%. The broader S&P 500 was set to open 3.7% lower, on pace to enter correction territory – a decline of 10% from a recent peak. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite, already in correction, was on pace to start the day 4% lower and is flirting with bear market territory – a decline of 20% from its peak.
Investors had been fearful that a dramatic escalation of the trade war could plunge the US and global economies into a recession. JPMorgan analysts said Thursday that America's economy and the broader world economy both had a 60% chance of sinking into a recession this year – and the odds of a recession would rise, the analysts said, if countries began to retaliate against the United States, as China did Friday. Retaliation raises the risk of further escalation and could diminish hopes for negotiation.
'Markets may actually be underreacting, especially if these rates turn out to be final, given the potential knock-on effects to global consumption and trade,' said Matt Burdett, head of equities at Thornburg Investment Management. 'The tariffs have injected a level of uncertainty and volatility we haven't seen since the early days of the pandemic.'
Traders ditched risky stocks and poured money into traditional safe havens, including government bonds and gold.
The 10-year Treasury yield, which briefly fell below 4% Thursday for the first time since October, fell firmly below 4% Friday as investors bought bonds to insulate themselves from a potential economic downturn. Bond prices and yields trade in opposite directions.
Gold prices surged above $3,130 a troy ounce, setting another record. But investors ditched other commodities, including oil, out of fear that the trade war could send the global economy into a recession. US oil, which plunged nearly 7% Thursday, tumbled another 6.1% below $63 a barrel. Brent oil futures, the global benchmark, fell 5.7%.
China announced sweeping 34% tariffs on all US goods starting April 10, a major escalation of a trade war that has been raging for years between the world's two largest economies. But the tit-for-tat tariff escalation kicked into high gear after Trump took office for the second time in January.
Trump in February placed an additional 10% tariff on all Chinese goods imported to the US and doubled that rate to 20% in March. On Wednesday, Trump announced that tariffs on China would rise to 54%. That's on top of existing import taxes, which he and former President Joe Biden already had in place on the country. So the effective tariff rate America imposes on Chinese goods will be around 70% starting April 9.
Markets have been on edge: The Russell 2000, which tracks smaller companies, entered a bear market Thursday. Stocks tumbled all over the world Friday: European and UK stocks were down more than 3%, on pace for their worst performance in years.
On Thursday, the Dow fell more than 1,600 points, or nearly 4%. The S&P 500 fell nearly 5% and the Nasdaq plunged nearly 6%. Each of the three major US indexes recorded its worst performance in about five years, since the pandemic.
Thursday's plunge erased $2.5 trillion in market value from the US stock market.
Trump said Thursday after the market close that he was open to negotiation on trade. He cited TikTok as an example, hoping China would agree to a sale of the popular social media app to a potential US buyer in exchange for lower tariffs.
'Every country has called us. That's the beauty of what we do, we put ourselves in the driver's seat,' Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One Thursday. 'As long as they are giving us something that's good. For instance, with TikTok as an example, we have a situation with TikTok where China will probably say, 'We'll approve a deal, but will you do something on the tariffs?' The tariffs give us great power to negotiate. They always have.'
Some countries say they're in active negotiations with the United States to lower the tariff barriers Trump announced this week. The United Kingdom, for example, said it is in talks with the United States to strike an economic agreement, British Foreign Minister David Lammy said on Friday.
But other countries chose to retaliate. Canada on Thursday announced retaliatory tariffs on some US-made cars.
France's finance minister said the European Union was not considering reciprocal tariffs to respond to the Trump administration's tariffs, because they could hurt European consumers, but the EU could target individual US companies, Eric Lombard said in an interview Friday with CNN affiliate BFMTV. The New York Times on Thursday reported the EU was considering penalties against Tesla.
Trump on Thursday dismissed the massive declines in the stock market, saying it's 'to be expected' and that the economy is in a 'transition period.' He called the economy a 'sick patient.'
Markets will have more to digest Friday. The US jobs report for March is set to be released at 8:30 am ET, and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is set to hold a discussion later Friday morning at which he will undoubtedly be asked about markets and the economy in the wake of Trump's tariff announcement.
This is a developing story and will be updated.

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