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Dow sheds 1,700 points. S&P 500 and Nasdaq have worst day since 2020 on tariff worries

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U.S. stock losses closed sharply lower, with the blue-chip Dow losing nearly 1,700 points and the broad S&P 500 tumbling about 275 points, after President Donald Trump unveiled his tariff plan late Wednesday.

Trump announced sweeping tariffs of at least 10% on all countries, effective April 5, and even higher levies for some countries to start soon. Some of China’s neighbors and biggest trading partners such as Bangladesh, Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia were slapped with the highest tariffs. Some multinational companies have moved their supply chains to these countries as they looked to diversify away from China.

Shares of companies like Walmart, Target, Five Below, Gap, Dollar Tree and Amazon that import a bulk of their goods from Asia dropped.

Among big tech, Apple shares got hammered, down 9.25%, because of its large manufacturing base in China.

Semiconductor and pharmaceuticals were among those exempted in this round, economists noted.

Investors fear the tariffs will spark an all-out trade war. Countries around the world from China to Canada lined up to denounce the tariffs and warn they will retaliate with reciprocal tariffs. A trade war would push prices higher and slow the economy, economists said.

“Although the U.S. seemed to open the door to negotiations with trading partners, domestic political considerations in those countries could make new trade agreements difficult to achieve,” said Brian Gardner, Stifel chief washington policy strategist. “Trade wars are easy to start but hard to end.”

Gregory Daco, EY chief economist, said “for the median household, this (tariffs) would represent an annual income loss of $690 while for families in the bottom quintile the loss would surpass $1,000.”

The Dow plunged 3.98%, or 1,679.39 points, to 40,545.93 and posted its largest one-day loss since September 2022; the S&P 500 lost 4.84%, or 274.45 points to 5,396.52 and had its worst day since June 2020; and the tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped 5.97%, or 1,050.44 points, to 16,550.60 for its biggest single day loss since March 2020. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are in correction, which is defined as at least 10% below their record high. The value erased from the stock market on Thursday was the most since March 2020, the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The next week will be critical as the highest tariff rates go in on April 9,” said Jeff Buchbinder, Chief Equity Strategist for LPL Financial. “Stocks should stabilize once negotiations start to bear fruit and take rates down, assuming it’s clear to markets that no meaningful tariff rates will be increased further because of retaliation.”

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