U.S. equities closed lower on Friday, snapping Thursday’s rally and capping a red week for Wall Street, as investors reacted to President Donald Trump’s announcement of a 35% tariff on Canadian imports and fresh threats targeting over 20 other countries.
Dow Jones: -279.13 points (-0.63%) to 44,371.51
S&P 500: -0.33% to 6,259.75
Nasdaq Composite: -0.22% to 20,585.53
The S&P 500’s Thursday all-time high was short-lived, as trade war fears returned with force ahead of the weekend.
Markets had shown resilience in recent weeks, shrugging off tariff announcements on copper, pharma, and semiconductors. But the breadth and aggressiveness of Friday’s new measures finally weighed on sentiment.
Trump’s latest move—targeting major U.S. trade partners—spurred concern about:
Global retaliation
Rising import costs
Inflationary pressures
Fed policy uncertainty
Investors now turn to key macro data and the Q2 earnings season for clarity.
June CPI (due Tuesday): Forecast to rise 0.3% MoM
Retail Sales (Thursday): Set to gauge consumer strength
Big Banks Kick Off Earnings Week: JPMorgan, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo are up first
The Federal Reserve’s rate outlook remains clouded, as officials warn that tariffs may fuel inflation, complicating potential policy easing.
As economic and earnings risks rise, expect analyst revisions and rating shifts across trade-exposed sectors—especially industrial, tech, and consumer discretionary.
Stay ahead of analyst moves with the Up/Down Grades by Company API, which tracks daily changes in analyst sentiment, outlook, and valuation models across U.S. and global stocks.
Additionally, broader market sentiment may deteriorate further if macro data disappoints or trade headlines worsen.
Monitor evolving company fundamentals using the Company Rating API, which offers a composite outlook on financial health, valuation, profitability, and market risk.