Markets plunge with S&P 500 down 6% and Dow down 2,200 after China
retaliates against Trump tariffs
[April 05, 2025] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street’s worst crisis since COVID slammed into a
higher gear Friday.
The S&P 500 lost 6% after China matched President Donald Trump’s big
raise in tariffs announced earlier this week. The move increased the
stakes in a trade war that could end with a recession that hurts
everyone. Not even a better-than-expected report on the U.S. job market,
which is usually the economic highlight of each month, was enough to
stop the slide.
The drop closed the worst week for the S&P 500 since March 2020, when
the pandemic ripped through the global economy. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average plunged 2,231 points, or 5.5% and the Nasdaq composite tumbled
5.8% to pull more than 20% below its record set in December.
So far there have been few, if any, winners in financial markets from
the trade war. Stocks for all but 14 of the 500 companies within the S&P
500 index fell Friday. The price of crude oil tumbled to its lowest
level since 2021. Other basic building blocks for economic growth, such
as copper, also saw prices slide on worries the trade war will weaken
the global economy.
China’s response to U.S. tariffs caused an immediate acceleration of
losses in markets worldwide. The Commerce Ministry in Beijing said it
would respond to the 34% tariffs imposed by the U.S. on imports from
China with its own 34% tariff on imports of all U.S. products beginning
April 10. The United States and China are the world’s two largest
economies.

Markets briefly recovered some of their losses after the release of
Friday morning’s U.S. jobs report, which said employers accelerated
their hiring by more last month than economists expected. It’s the
latest signal that the U.S. job market has remained relatively solid
through the start of 2025, and it’s been a linchpin keeping the U.S.
economy out of a recession.
But that jobs data was backward looking, and the fear hitting financial
markets is about what’s to come.
“The world has changed, and the economic conditions have changed,” said
Rick Rieder, chief investment officer of global fixed income at
BlackRock.
The central question looking ahead is: Will the trade war cause a global
recession? If it does, stock prices may need to come down even more than
they have already. The S&P 500 is down 17.4% from its record set in
February.
Trump seemed unfazed. From Mar-a-Lago, his private club in Florida, he
headed to his golf course a few miles away after writing on social media
that “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO GET RICH.”
The Federal Reserve could cushion the blow of tariffs on the economy by
cutting interest rates, which can encourage companies and households to
borrow and spend. But the Fed may have less freedom to move than it
would like.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said Friday that tariffs could drive up
expectations for inflation. That could prove more damaging than high
inflation itself, because it can drive a vicious cycle of behavior that
only worsens inflation. U.S. households have already said they’re
bracing for sharp increases to their bills.
“Our obligation is to keep longer-term inflation expectations well
anchored and to make certain that a one-time increase in the price level
does not become an ongoing inflation problem,” Powell said.

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Traders Jonathan Muller, left, and Michael Capolino work on the
floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Friday, April 4, 2025. (AP
Photo/Richard Drew)
 That could indicate a hesitance to
cut rates because lower rates can give inflation more fuel.
Much will depend on how long Trump’s tariffs stick and what kind of
retaliations other countries deliver. Some of Wall Street is holding
onto hope that Trump will lower the tariffs after prying “wins” from
other countries following negotiations.
Trump has given mixed signals on that. On Friday, he said Vietnam
“wants to cut their Tariffs down to ZERO if they are able to make an
agreement with the U.S.” Trump also criticized China’s retaliation,
saying on his Truth Social platform that “CHINA PLAYED IT WRONG,
THEY PANICKED - THE ONE THING THEY CANNOT AFFORD TO DO!”
Trump has said Americans may feel “some pain” because of tariffs,
but he has also said the long-term goals, including getting more
manufacturing jobs back to the United States, are worth it. On
Thursday, he likened the situation to a medical operation, where the
U.S. economy is the patient.
“For investors looking at their portfolios, it could have felt like
an operation performed without anesthesia,” said Brian Jacobsen,
chief economist at Annex Wealth Management.
But Jacobsen also said the next surprise for investors could be how
quickly tariffs get negotiated down. “The speed of recovery will
depend on how, and how quickly, officials negotiate,” he said.
On Wall Street, stocks of companies that do lots of business in
China fell to some of the sharpest losses.
DuPont dropped 12.7% after China said its regulators are launching
an anti-trust investigation into DuPont China group, a subsidiary of
the chemical giant. It’s one of several measures targeting American
companies and in retaliation for the U.S. tariffs.

GE Healthcare got 12% of its revenue last year from the China
region, and it fell 16%.
All told, the S&P 500 fell 322.44 points to 5,074.08. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average dropped 2,231.07 to 38,314.86, and the Nasdaq
composite fell 962.82 to 15,587.79.
In stock markets abroad, Germany’s DAX lost 5%, France’s CAC 40
dropped 4.3% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 2.8%.
In the bond market, Treasury yields fell, but they pared their drops
following Powell’s cautious statements about inflation. The yield on
the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.01% from 4.06% late Thursday and from
roughly 4.80% early this year. It had gone below 3.90% in the
morning.
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AP Writers Jiang Junzhe, Huizhong Wu and Matt Ott contributed.
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