Stocks roll over after Trump reportedly OK's additional tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports
Stocks surrendered their gains Friday after Bloomberg reported President Donald Trump instructed his administration to follow through with tariffs on roughly $200 billion worth of Chinese imports - despite a fresh round of trade negotiations between the world's largest economies having been proposed days earlier.
Here's the scoreboard:
Dow Jones industrial average: 26,104.82 −41.17 (-0.16%)
S&P 500: 2,901.35 −2.83 (-0.097%)
Nasdaq Composite: 7,990.10 −23.61 (-0.29%)
Shares of large-cap industrial stocks like Caterpillar (-0.6%) fell following the report. Boeing (+0.4%) pared gains after trading up more than 1%. Apple, which recently warned tariffs could force the company to raise prices, extended losses to trade down 1.2%.
On the commodities front, oil prices shed nearly $1 per barrel as investors feared China could retaliate with its proposed 25% tariff on crude imports. West Texas Intermediate, the US benchmark, nearly erased gains and fell below $68 a barrel. Brent was trading down 0.2% at $78.25.
Offshore, the Chinese yuan sank 0.36% against the dollar. Treasury yields jumped.
Another round of US tariffs would bring the running total of targeted Chinese products to $250 billion, and is poised to affect consumers more than the levies already enacted.
Beijing, which was swift to counter Trump's first two rounds of tariffs in kind, has signaled it will retaliate against further trade escalations. While China doesn't import enough from the US to match the duties dollar-for-dollar, it could increase tariff rates or use qualitative measures like creating administrative headaches for American companies.