Wall Street ends mixed amid Trump's new tariff deadlines
[July 09, 2025] By
ALEX VEIGA
A choppy day in the markets left major U.S. stock indexes little changed
Tuesday as the Trump administration pressed its campaign to win more
favorable trade deals with nations around the globe by leaning into
tariffs on goods coming into the U.S.
The S&P 500 slipped 0.1% a day after posting its biggest loss since
mid-June. The benchmark index remains near its all-time high set last
week.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gave back 0.4%. The Nasdaq composite
eked out a gain of less than 0.1%, staying near its own record high.
The sluggish trading came as the market was coming off a broad sell-off
following the Trump administration’s decision to impose new import
tariffs set to go into effect next month on more than a dozen nations.
Still, the modest pullback in the markets is a sign that Wall Street may
be betting that the U.S. and its trading partners may eventually
negotiate deals that will reduce or eliminate the need for punishing
tariffs, said Ross Mayfield, investment strategist at Baird.
“I think today you’re basically seeing a market that doesn’t quite
believe the worst of this is going to come to bear and is just kind of
waiting for any sort of clarity because we seem back in that in that
kind of phase where things change every couple of hours,” Mayfield said.
On Monday, President Donald Trump set a 25% tax on goods imported from
Japan and South Korea and new tariff rates on a dozen other nations
scheduled to go into effect on Aug. 1.
Trump provided notice by posting letters on Truth Social that were
addressed to the leaders of the various countries. The letters warned
them to not retaliate by increasing their own import taxes, or else the
Trump administration would further increase tariffs.

Just before hefty U.S. tariffs on goods imported from nearly every
country around the globe were to take effect in April, Trump postponed
the levies for 90 days in hopes that foreign governments would be more
willing to strike new trade deals. That 90-day negotiating period was
set to expire before Wednesday.
With the tariffs set to kick in now on Aug. 1, the latest move by the
White House amounts to essentially a four-week extension of its previous
90-day pause, wrote Tobin Marcus, an analyst at Wolfe Research.
“At a very basic level, nothing actually happened based on Trump sending
these letters, so there’s no reason to panic over headlines,” he wrote.
“But we think these moves do contain some signal about where the trade
war is heading, and that signal is mostly hawkish.”
During a cabinet meeting Tuesday, Trump said he would be announcing
tariffs on pharmaceutical drugs at a “very, very high rate, like 200%.”
He also said he would sign an executive order placing a 50% tariff on
copper imports, matching the rates charged on steel and aluminum.
Shares in mining company Freeport-McMoRan rose 2.5% following Trump’s
remarks. The price of copper for September delivery jumped 13.1% to
$5.69 per pound.
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Trader Robert Charmak, left, works on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange, Tuesday, July 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
 This latest phase in the trade war
heightens the threat of potentially more severe tariffs that’s been
hanging over the global economy. Higher taxes on imported goods
could hinder economic growth, if not increase recession risks.
Gains in technology, energy and health care stocks helped outweigh a
pullback in banks and other sectors.
Intel jumped 7.2%, Exxon Mobil rose 2.8% and AbbVie
rose 1.1%. JPMorgan and Bank of America each fell 3.1%.
Amazon shares fell 1.8% as the online retail giant kicked off Prime
Day, which, beginning this year, lasts four days. Amazon launched
the membership sales event in 2015 and expanded it to two days in
2019.
Elsewhere in the market, First Solar slid 6.5% after Trump issued an
executive order ending subsidies for foreign-controlled energy
companies.
Hershey Co. lost 3.2% after the chocolate maker announced that
Wendy’s CEO Kirk Tanner will succeed current CEO Michele Buck, who
is retiring.
Shares in WeightWatchers parent WW International gave up an early
gain and dropped 1.1% after the company announced that it has
completed its reorganization and relisting on Nasdaq. The company
filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in May to eliminate $1.15
billion in debt and focus on its transition into a telehealth
services provider.
Bond yields mostly rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury edged up
to 4.40% from 4.39% late Monday.
All told, the S&P 500 fell 4.46 points to 6,225.52. The Dow lost
165.60 points to 44,240.76, and the Nasdaq added 5.95 points to
20,418.46.
The market's downbeat start to the week follows a strong run for
stocks, which pushed further into record heights last week after a
better-than-expected U.S. jobs report.
In stock markets overseas, indexes rose across much of Europe and
Asia. In two of the bigger moves, South Korea’s Kospi surged 1.8%,
and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index climbed 1.1%.
The National Federation of Independent Business reported Tuesday
that its small business optimism index fell slightly last month, in
line with analysts’ expectations. The index tracks how small firms
view the U.S. economy and their business prospects.
On Wednesday the Federal Reserve will release minutes from its
policymaking committee’s meeting last month. The Fed’s chair, Jerome
Powell, has said the central bank wants to wait and see how Trump’s
tariffs affect the economy and inflation before making its next move
on interest rates.
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