Wall Street rises and markets rally worldwide as Trump softens his tough
talk on tariffs and the Fed
[April 24, 2025] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks rose Wednesday as a worldwide rally came
back around to Wall Street after President Donald Trump appeared to back
off his criticism of the Federal Reserve and his tough talk in his trade
war.
The S&P 500 climbed 1.7% and added to its big gain from Tuesday that
more than made up for a steep loss on Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 419 points, or 1.1%, and the Nasdaq composite gained 2.5%.
Wall Street’s gains followed strong moves higher for stocks across much
of Europe and Asia. They also continued a dizzying, up-and-down run for
financial markets as investors struggle with how to react to so much
uncertainty about what Trump will do with his economic policies.
The market’s latest move was up in part because Trump said late Tuesday
that he has “no intention” to fire the head of the Federal Reserve.
Trump had been angry with Jerome Powell, whom Trump had called “a major
loser,” because of the Fed’s hesitance to cut interest rates.
Trump’s tough talk had frightened investors because the Fed is supposed
to act independently, without pressure from politicians, so that it can
make decisions that may be painful in the short term but are best for
the long term.
While a cut to interest rates by the Fed could give the economy a boost,
it could also put upward pressure on inflation. Economists say Trump’s
tariffs are likely both to slow the economy and to raise inflation, at
least briefly.

Trump may have recognized the market’s fear about a move against Powell.
He may also be looking to keep someone around whom Trump could blame
later if the economy does fall into a recession, according to Thierry
Wizman, a strategist at Macquarie.
“Indeed, if the Fed cuts its policy interest rates aggressively, Trump
would have little excuse for a recession apart from the pugnacity of his
tariff policies,” Wizman said.
Markets also rose after Trump said late Tuesday that U.S. tariffs on
imports coming from China could come down “substantially” from the
current 145%. “It won’t be that high, not going to be that high,” Trump
said.
The hope along Wall Street has been that Trump would lower his tariffs
after negotiating trade deals with other countries, and Trump said
Tuesday he would be “very nice” to the world’s second-largest economy
and not play hardball with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
“There is an opportunity for a big deal here,” U.S. Treasury Secretary
Scott Bessent said Wednesday.
If Trump brings his tariffs down enough, investors believe a recession
could be averted.
U.S. businesses say they’re already feeling the effects of the trade
war. A preliminary reading of U.S. business activity fell to a 16-month
low, as the threat of tariffs helped push up prices charged for goods
and services, according to S&P Global’s latest survey released
Wednesday.
All the uncertainty means one of the few predictions many along Wall
Street are willing to make is that sharp swings for financial markets
will continue for a while. The market will “more likely than not
continue to be dictated by Trump’s latest whims regarding tariffs and
trade,” said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade.
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Trader Michael Milano works on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange, Wednesday, April 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
 The S&P 500 remains 12.5% below its
record set earlier this year after briefly dropping roughly 20%
below the mark. Its swings have been coming not just day to day but
also hour to hour as Trump and his administration’s officials
continue to surprise markets. On Wednesday alone, the S&P 500
charged to a 3.4% gain in the morning, only to more than halve that
rise as the day progressed.
Trump’s latest comments had a relaxing effect on
the bond market, where Treasury yields eased. It’s a turnaround from
earlier this month, when spiking Treasury yields raised fears that
Trump’s actions were scaring investors away from the United States
and weakening the U.S. bond market’s reputation as one of the safest
places to keep cash.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.38% from 4.41% late
Tuesday. It dropped as low as 4.26% earlier in the morning.
On Wall Street, Big Tech helped lead stock indexes higher.
Nvidia rose 3.9% to claw back more of the sharp losses it took last
week, when it said U.S. restrictions on exports of its H20 chips to
China could hurt its first-quarter results by $5.5 billion. The chip
company’s stock was the strongest single force lifting the S&P 500.
Other stocks in the artificial-intelligence technology ecosystem
also drove higher. Vertiv Holdings, which traces its roots to the
industry’s first manufacturer of computer room air conditioning,
jumped 8.5% after reporting stronger profit and revenue for the
latest quarter than analysts expected. It said it’s continuing to
see accelerated demand from AI data centers.
Super Micro Computer, a company that makes servers used in AI, rose
7.6%. Palantir Technologies, which offers an AI platform for
customers, climbed 7.3%.
Tesla revved 5.4% higher after CEO Elon Musk said he’ll spend less
time in Washington and more time running his electric vehicle
company after Tesla on late Tuesday reported a big drop in profits.
It’s been struggling because of backlash against Musk’s efforts to
lead cost-cutting efforts by the U.S. government.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 88.10 points to 5,375.86. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average added 419.59 to 39,606.57, and the Nasdaq
composite gained 407.63 to 16,708.05.
In stock markets abroad, indexes jumped 2.1% in France, 2.4% in Hong
Kong and 1.9% in Japan. Stocks in Shanghai were an exception, where
they dipped 0.1%.
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AP Business Writers Yuri Kageyama and Matt Ott contributed.
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