
Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq slide as inflation, tariff fears push stocks to another losing week
Table Of Content
- Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq close week down amid inflation, tariff fears
- Tesla stock on track for weekly loss as slump in China deliveries caps volatile week
- Oil posts weekly loss as US-China trade war sparks demand concerns
- Meta reportedly announces layoffs coming, impacting 5% of employees
- Trending tickers on Friday
- Goolsbee says Fed ‘may be on hold’ for now but sees rates going lower in next 12-18 months
- Inflation fears rise to highest since Nov. 2023 as consumer sentiment hits 7-month low
- Big Tech is a pawn in US-China trade war. Here’s why some will feel the heat more than others.
- Consumers are starting to think 7% mortgages are here to stay
- Major averages turn negative after weak consumer sentiment data
- Stocks inch higher after jobs report shows signs of resilience
- US added 143,000 jobs in January, while unemployment slipped to 4%
- Europe stocks wobble, but head for 7th weekly win
- Good morning. Here’s what’s happening today.
- Chinese tech shines on DeepSeek hype
- Amazon warns that it will face difficulties in meeting AI demand in 2025
US stocks fell on Friday as investors reacted to the threat of more possible tariffs from the Trump administration while digesting a jump in consumer expectations for inflation and an overshadowed monthly jobs report.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) moved almost 1% lower, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) slid around 1.4%, both finishing their second week of consecutive losses. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) also fell more than 400 points, or almost 1%, to register its worst daily performance in roughly four weeks.
At the White House on Friday, President Donald Trump said he would soon announce a plan on reciprocal tariffs on American imports. The comments were made during a meeting with Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, during which Trump also said tariffs on Japan were an option.
The major gauges slid earlier into the red after US consumer sentiment sank to a seven-month low in early February, undershooting forecasts. Inflation expectations jumped amid concerns about Trump’s tariff threats.
Americans now expect an inflation rate of 4.3% over the next year, a full percentage point higher than last month, the University of Michigan survey found.
The 10-year Treasury (^TNX) yield rose to a session high of 4.5% in the wake of the sentiment update and the monthly jobs report. That report saw US economy added 143,000 jobs in January, missing economist expectations, but still showing signs of resilience in the labor market. Unemployment ticked down to 4.0%, from 4.1% in December.
Meanwhile, Amazon (AMZN) stock fell 4% after the e-commerce giant joined Google (GOOG) and other AI-focused Big Tech companies in disappointing Wall Street with its revenue outlook.
LIVE COVERAGE IS OVER 16 updates
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Europe stocks wobble, but head for 7th weekly win
Stocks in Europe wavered on Friday but were on track for weekly gains after a run of robust earnings reports from Novo Nordisk (NVO, NOVO-B.CO) and others.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 (^STOXX) index was holding steady, not far off record highs as it eyed its seventh weekly win in a row. In 2025 so far, European stocks have notched their best performance compared with their US counterparts in around 10 years.
In individual benchmarks, Germany’s DAX (^GDAXI) edged up 0.1%, while the CAC (^FCHI) in Paris traded flat.
London’s FTSE 100 index (^FTSE) slipped roughly 0.3%, after surging on Thursday on the heels of an interest rate cut by the Bank of England that came with unexpectedly dovish commentary.
-
-
-