By: Sayan
Published on: Apr 04, 2025
April 4, 2025 — US stock futures tumbled on Friday, signaling another brutal session for Wall Street as markets reeled from President Trump’s sweeping reciprocal tariffs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F), S&P 500 (ES=F), and Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) futures dropped 0.9%, 0.8%, and 0.5%, respectively, extending a $2.5 trillion market wipeout fueled by escalating trade-war fears. Investors now brace for critical updates from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech and the March jobs report, which could shape the Fed’s response to mounting recession risks.
President Trump’s latest tariff announcement sent shockwaves through global markets, erasing $2.5 trillion in market value on Thursday alone—the worst single-day sell-off since the 2020 pandemic crash. The tariffs, targeting key trading partners, aim to “level the playing field” but have reignited fears of a 2018-style trade war.
Despite the chaos, Trump doubled down on his strategy, telling reporters aboard Air Force One, “The rollout is going very well. We’re open to phenomenal offers from countries to negotiate.” Economists, however, warn that prolonged tariffs could derail the US economy’s fragile recovery, with recession risks climbing sharply.
All eyes turn to the March jobs report, set for release at 8:30 a.m. ET. The data will reveal whether the labor market remained resilient ahead of Trump’s tariff rollout.
A weaker-than-expected report could amplify fears of stagflation—a toxic mix of slowing growth and persistent inflation—as the Fed weighs rate cuts against inflationary pressures.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s Friday morning speech at the Economic Club of Washington takes on heightened significance. Traders now price in four rate cuts in 2025, up from two earlier this year, as markets bet the Fed will prioritize economic stabilization over inflation.
Powell’s remarks will likely echo the Fed’s cautious stance, but analysts warn that prolonged trade tensions could force aggressive monetary easing.
Why It Matters: OPEC+ accelerated plans to add 411,000 barrels per day to global supply by May, worsening the oversupply fears. ING analysts noted, “This brings forward the expected surplus… a wider Brent-Dubai spread suggests weaker demand ahead.”
1. Tech (Nasdaq):
Semiconductor stocks face double jeopardy—tariffs on Chinese imports and weaker consumer demand. Companies like NVIDIA (NVDA) and AMD (AMD) slid 2% premarket.
2. Automakers:
Ford (F) and GM (GM) fell 3% as retaliatory EU tariffs on US vehicles loom.
3. Agriculture:
Soybean futures dropped 4% amid fears of lost Chinese demand, echoing 2018’s trade war patterns.
Goldman Sachs now assigns a 35% probability of a US recession in 2025—up from 20% pre-tariffs. Investors are flocking to safe havens:
As markets brace for prolonged turbulence, the March jobs report and Jerome Powell’s speech could offer fleeting relief—or confirm darker fears. For now, the path forward hinges on Washington’s next move. Will Trump dial back tariffs, or is this the start of a new economic cold war?
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
Leave a Comment