Stock market today: Wall Street slumps as worries worsen about inflation
and tariffs
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[February 08, 2025] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks slumped Friday as worries flared again on
Wall Street about tariffs and inflation.
The S&P 500 fell 0.9% and erased what had been a modest gain for the
week. It’s one of the worse drops for the index so far in the young
year, but it remains near its record set two weeks ago.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 444 points, or 1%, and a sharp
fall for Amazon after its latest profit report dragged the Nasdaq
composite to a market-leading loss of 1.4%.
Treasury yields also climbed in the bond market after a discouraging
report on Friday morning suggested sentiment is unexpectedly souring
among U.S. consumers. The preliminary report from the University of
Michigan said U.S. consumers are expecting inflation in the year ahead
to hit 4.3%, the highest such forecast since 2023.
That’s a full percentage point above what consumers said they were
expecting a month earlier, and it’s the second straight increase of an
unusual amount. Economists pointed to the possibility of U.S. tariffs on
a wide range of imported products, which President Donald Trump has
proposed and could ultimately push up prices for U.S. consumers.
Trump said at a White House press conference Friday that he’s likely to
have an announcement on Monday or Tuesday on “reciprocal tariffs, where
a country pays so much or charges us so much, and we do the same.”
The consumer-sentiment data followed a mixed update on the U.S. job
market, which is often each month’s most anticipated economic report. It
showed hiring last month was less than half of December’s rate, but it
also included encouraging nuggets for workers: The unemployment rate
eased, and workers saw bigger gains in average wages than economists
expected.
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All the data taken together could keep the Federal Reserve on hold when
it comes to interest rates. The Fed began cutting its main interest rate
in September in order to relax the pressure on the economy and job
market, but it warned at the end of the year that it may cut fewer times
in 2025 than it earlier expected given worries about inflation staying
stubbornly high.
Interest rates are one of the things Wall Street cares most about
because lower rates can lead to higher prices for stocks and other
investments. The downside is they can also give inflation more fuel.
For Scott Wren, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo
Investment Institute, the jobs report did nothing to change his forecast
for the Fed to cut the federal funds rate just once in 2025. That’s a
touch more conservative than many traders on Wall Street, who
collectively see a 45% chance the Fed will cut at least twice, according
to data from CME Group. Of course, some traders are also betting on the
possibility for zero cuts.
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Trader Fred Demarco, left, and specialist Genaro Saporito work the
floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025. (AP
Photo/Richard Drew)
 Wren said financial markets could
stay shaky in the near term, not only because of uncertainty about
interest rates but also about Trump’s tariffs and other unknowns
around the world.
After rocking financial markets at the start of this week, worries
about a potentially punishing global trade war had eased a bit after
Trump gave 30-day reprieves for tariffs on both Mexico and Canada.
In the meantime, stocks of big U.S. companies continue to swing as
they report how much profit they made during the last three months
of 2024. Most are reporting better results than expected, which is
typical, but that’s not always enough.
Amazon, one of Wall Street’s most influential companies, topped
analysts’ expectations for earnings at the end of 2024, but its
stock nevertheless fell 4.1%. Investors focused instead on its
forecast for upcoming revenue, which fell short of analysts’
expectations.
Homebuilders also tumbled to sharp losses as fewer cuts to interest
rates by the Fed could help keep mortgage rates high. D.R. Horton
fell 5%, and Lennar sank 4.2%.
On the winning side of Wall Street was Expedia Group, which leaped
17.3% after reporting better profit for the last three months of
2024 than analysts had forecast.
Expedia CEO Ariane Gorin said demand for travel during the latest
quarter was stronger than expected, and the company is also bringing
back its dividend for investors. It had suspended its payouts to
shareholders in 2020 after the COVID-19 pandemic crushed the travel
industry.
All told, the S&P 500 fell 57.58 points to 6,025.99. The Dow Jones
Industrial Average dropped 444.23 to 44,303.40, and the Nasdaq
composite sank 268.59 to 19,523.40.
In the bond market, the 10-year Treasury yield rose to 4.48% from
4.44% late Thursday. The two-year Treasury yield, which more closely
tracks expectations for the Fed, rose more. It climbed to 4.28% from
4.22%.
A fear among economists is that when U.S. households expect
inflation to be high in the future, they could begin buying things
in advance and making other moves that can leadto a self-fulfilling
cycle that worsens inflation. That could push the Fed to keep the
federal funds rate higher than it otherwise would.
In stock markets abroad, indexes fell modestly across Europe after
finishing mixed in Asia.
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AP Business Writer Zen Soo contributed.
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