Wall Street shuddered, and a level of shock unseen since COVID’s outbreak tore through financial markets worldwide Thursday on worries about the damage U.S. President Donald Trump’s newest set of tariffs could do to economies across continents, including his own.
The S&P 500 sank 4.8 per cent, more than in major markets across Asia and Europe, for its worst day since the pandemic crashed the economy in 2020. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1,679 points, or four per cent, and the Nasdaq composite tumbled six per cent.
Little was spared in financial markets as fear flared about the potentially toxic mix of weakening economic growth and higher inflation that tariffs can create.
Everything from crude oil to Big Tech stocks to the value of the U.S. dollar against other currencies fell. Even gold, which hit records recently as investors sought something safer to own, pulled lower. Some of the worst hits walloped smaller U.S. companies, and the Russell 2000 index of smaller stocks dropped 6.6 per cent to pull more than 20 per cent below its record.
Canada’s main stock index, S&P/TSX, fell 971.42 points, or 3.84 per cent.
Americans offered mixed opinions on President Donald Trump’s sweeping new tariffs, outside the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday. The U.S. stock market led a global market meltdown amid fears of a spike in costs for businesses and households.
Investors worldwide knew Trump was going to announce a sweeping set of tariffs late Wednesday, and fears surrounding it had already pulled Wall Street’s main measure of health, the S&P 500 index, 10 per cent below its all-time high.
But Trump still managed to surprise them with “the worst-case scenario for tariffs,” according to Mary Ann Bartels, chief investment officer at Sanctuary Wealth.
Trump announced a minimum tariff of 10 per cent on imports, with the tax rate running much higher on products from certain countries like China and those from the European Union. It’s “plausible” the tariffs altogether, which would rival levels unseen in roughly a century, could knock down U.S. economic growth by two percentage points this year and raise inflation close to five per cent, according to UBS.
Wall Street had long assumed Trump would use tariffs merely as a tool for negotiations with other countries, rather than as a long-term policy. But Wednesday’s announcement may suggest Trump sees tariffs more as helping to solve an ideological goal than as an opening bet in a poker game.
Trump on Wednesday talked about wresting manufacturing jobs back to the U.S., a process that could take years. If Trump follows through on his tariffs, stock prices may need to fall much more than 10 per cent from their all-time high in order to reflect the recession that could follow, along with the hit to profits that U.S. companies could take. The S&P 500 is now down 11.8 per cent from its record set in February.
Representatives of U.S. President Donald Trump were making the rounds on Thursday morning, defending his global tariffs plan as stock indexes tumbled in response.
“Markets may actually be under-reacting, especially if these rates turn out to be final, given the potential knock-on effects to global consumption and trade,” said Sean Sun, portfolio manager at Thornburg Investment Management, though he sees Trump’s announcement on Wednesday as more of an opening move than an endpoint for policy.
Trump offered an upbeat reaction after he was asked about the market’s drop as he left the White House to fly to his Florida golf club on Thursday.
“I think it’s going very well,” he said. “We have an operation, like when a patient gets operated on and it’s a big thing. I said this would exactly be the way it is.”
Yields on Treasurys tumbled in part on rising expectations for coming cuts to rates, along with general fear about the health of the U.S. economy. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.04 per cent from 4.2 per cent late Wednesday and from roughly 4.8 per cent in January. That’s a huge move for the bond market.
Worries about a potentially stagnating economy and high inflation knocked down all kinds of stocks, leading to drops for four out of every five that make up the S&P 500.
Best Buy fell 17.8 per cent because the electronics that it sells are made all over the world. United Airlines lost 15.6 per cent because customers worried about the global economy may not fly as much for business or feel comfortable enough to take vacations. Target tumbled 10.9 per cent amid worries that its customers, already squeezed by still-high inflation, may be under even more stress.
In stock markets abroad, indexes fell sharply worldwide. France’s CAC 40 dropped 3.3 per cent, and Germany’s DAX lost three per cent in Europe. Japan’s Nikkei 225 sank 2.8 per cent, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 1.5 per cent and South Korea’s Kospi dropped 0.8 per cent.
Canada’s auto sector is bracing for the potential impacts of 25 per cent U.S. tariffs while steel and aluminum makers, already hit with tariffs, are struggling with added costs and lost business.
What comes next?
One wild card is that the U.S. Federal Reserve could cut interest rates in order to support the economy. That’s what it had been doing late last year before pausing in 2025. Lower interest rates help by making it easier for U.S. companies and households to borrow and spend.
The Fed may have less freedom to move than it would like, though. While lower rates can goose the economy, they can also push upward on inflation. And worries are already worsening about that because of tariffs, with U.S. households in particular bracing for sharp increases to their bills.
The U.S. economy at the moment is still growing. A report on Thursday said fewer U.S. workers applied for unemployment benefits last week. Economist had been expecting to see an uptick in joblessness, and a relatively solid job market has been the linchpin keeping the economy out of recession.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen described the tariffs as a major blow to the world economy and said the 27-member bloc was prepared to respond with countermeasures if talks with Washington failed.
Von der Leyen said the EU was already finalizing a first package of tariffs on up to 26 billion euros ($28.4 billion US) of U.S. goods for mid-April in response to American steel and aluminum tariffs that took effect on March 12.
“And we’re now preparing for further countermeasures to protect our interests and our businesses if negotiations fail,” von der Leyen said in a statement she read out in the Uzbek city of Samarkand on Thursday, ahead of an EU-Central Asia partnership summit.
The EU also faces 25 per cent U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum tariffs, on cars from Thursday and on car parts within a month, with pharmaceuticals possibly to come.
French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday will host representatives of business sectors that will be hit by the new tariffs, which apply from Saturday.
Front Burner29:13Trump’s trade war goes global
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