Donald Trump, NASDAQ and tariffs
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President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs plunged the stock market into the red Thursday, marking its worst day since the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell...
From Washington Examiner
President Trump unveiled a sweeping new tariff plan at a Rose Garden ceremony Wednesday, declaring “Liberation Day” for U.S. trade policy.
From Wall Street Journal
The S&P 500 fell 4.8%, while the Nasdaq fell 6% — both their worst since 2020.
From NBC News
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Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) stock posted gains despite big sell-offs for the broader market Thursday. The semiconductor company's share price closed out the day up 2.1% and had been up as much as 8.7% earlier in trading.
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24/7 Wall St. on MSNLive Stock Market News: Nasdaq Composite Down 4.5% & Dow Drops 1,200 PointsYou can read our live blog where we covered the tariff announcements and market reaction from last night, but the big picture is: The United States is issuing reciprocal tariffs that are largely calculated on trade imbalances rather than tariff rates.
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Cryptopolitan on MSNS&P 500 and Nasdaq go deeper into correction as Russell 2000 enters bear marketThe Russell 2000 dropped hard on Thursday, sliding 6.6% during the session and putting it 22.5% below its 52-week high, which means small-cap stocks are officially in a bear market. Wall Street uses a 20% drop as the line for that.
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Investor's Business Daily on MSNStock Market Today: Dow Plunges Nearly 1,700 Points; Small Caps Hit Bear Ground But These Stocks Shine (Live Coverage)Techs, small caps, banks, private equity and other stocks led a furious sell-off in the stock market today in the wake of sweeping tariffs by President Trump.
US stocks extend their opening losses on fearsTrump's tariff plan will lead to trade war. Dow loses 1400 pts. S&P 500 headed for worst day in 2 years.
Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day: Stock futures plummeted after President Donald Trump shocked investors by announcing higher-than-expected tariffs Wednesday afternoon.