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Apple ( AAPL ) leads decline among Big Tech
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Retail stocks slump on Asia tariff worries
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Wall St fear gauge hits 3-week high
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Futures down: Futures down: Dow 3%, S&P 500 3.7%, Nasdaq
4.4%
(Updates with prices before the opening bell)
By Sruthi Shankar and Pranav Kashyap
April 3 (Reuters) -
Futures tracking the Nasdaq tumbled 4% on Thursday as
President Donald Trump's
sweeping tariffs
on major trade partners sparked fears of a full-blown trade
war and raised the risk of tipping the global economy into a
recession.
Apple ( AAPL )
sank 7.6% in premarket trading, reeling from the
impact of an aggregate 54% tariff on China, which is the base
for much of Apple's ( AAPL ) manufacturing. Microsoft ( MSFT ) dropped
2.7% and Nvidia ( NVDA ) fell 6%.
Nasdaq 100 e-minis tumbled 4.4% by 08:51 a.m. ET
(1251 GMT). S&P 500 e-minis fell 3.7% and Dow futures
dropped 3%.
Global stocks slumped, government bonds jumped and
safe-haven gold touched a record high as Trump slapped a 10%
tariff on most goods imported to the United States and much
higher levies on dozens of rivals.
"This was the first bullet thrown in this trade war and
it could get nasty and that is spooking investors. We're going
to continue to trade on a heavy tone because of the heightened
risk of either recession or stagflation," said Elias Haddad,
senior markets strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman.
"We could see the correction bottom out when we have
firm evidence that we're not falling into recession."
The CBOE Volatility index, known as Wall Street's
fear gauge, touched a three-week high at 26.91 points.
The tariffs, poised to disrupt the global trade order
and unsettle businesses, highlight a stark shift from just a few
months ago when the promise of business-friendly policies under
the Trump administration propelled U.S. stocks to record highs.
The benchmark S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq
fell 10% from their record highs last month, marking a
correction, as investors priced in the damage from tariffs on
the economy and businesses.
Traders are
ramping up expectations
for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates at least
three times this year, with the possibility of a fourth cut by
the year's end becoming less of a long shot.
That heightens the significance of Friday's payrolls
data and Fed Chair Jerome Powell's speech, which could offer
crucial insights into the health of the U.S. economy and the
future path of interest rates.
Data on Thursday
showed
the number of Americans filing new applications for
unemployment benefits fell last week, pointing to continued
labor market stability ahead of potential volatility from import
tariffs.
"The prospect of looser monetary policy and potentially
greater fiscal stimulus once the Trump administration announces
the tax cut plan should provide some support to equity markets,"
Haddad added.
Retailers were hit hard on Thursday, with Nike ( NKE )
dropping 13% and Walmart ( WMT ) falling 5.7% after Trump
imposed a raft of new tariffs on major production hubs including
Vietnam, Indonesia and China.
Big banks such as JPMorgan Chase & Co ( JPM ), Citigroup ( C/PN )
and Bank of America Corp ( BAC ), which are sensitive to
economic risks, dropped about 4.5% each.
Futures tracking the U.S. small-cap Russell 2000 index
tumbled 5.1%, underscoring concerns about the health of
the domestic economy.
Oil stocks including Exxon Mobil ( XOM ) and Chevron
fell about 4% each as crude prices slumped 6% on
Trump tariffs and OPEC+ speeding up output hikes.