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Trump's tariffs cause economic worry

The major stock indexes fell sharply on Tuesday. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 10% since its record high in December, and Treasury yields declined as well. This is because the United States imposed steep tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China, which has fueled investor concerns about the economic impact.

The S&P 500 fell more than 1% while MSCI's global stock index dropped by 13.14 points or 1.54% to 842.67. The Nasdaq dropped 10% from the record high it reached on December 16, into correction territory.

Wall Street was hit by a broad selloff, as all major sectors fell. Financials fell the most, by 3.9%.

The news cycle moves so quickly and there are so many things happening. Tariffs broke the camel’s back. Jake Dollarhide is CEO of Longbow Asset Management, Tulsa.

He said that tariffs are a major concern for consumers about rising prices. "This economy was driven and saved by consumers. He said that the increase in grocery costs was a concern for consumers.

The new 25% tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump on imports from Mexico, Canada and China and the doubling in duties on Chinese imports may cause a disruption of nearly $2.2 trillion worth of annual trade between the U.S. and its three biggest trading partners.

China responded immediately with 10%-15% of tariffs on some U.S. exports starting March 10, and a number of new restrictions on the export of certain U.S. entities. Meanwhile, Justin Trudeau, Canadian Prime Minister announced that Ottawa would impose 25% of tariffs on C$30 Billion ($20.72 Billion) of U.S. imported goods.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 764.08 or 1.75 % to 42,434.53, while the S&P 500 fell 99.56 or 1.68 % to 5,750.16, and the Nasdaq Composite declined 258.57 or 1.39% to 18,094.61.

The STOXX 600 pan-European index fell 2.2%. In Asia, the Nikkei index of Japan fell by 1.2% while Taiwan's benchmark index lost 0.7%.

Government bond yields fell. The yield on the benchmark U.S. Treasury note fell 3.8 basis points, to 4,142% from its previous low of 4.115%.

Amid growth and tariff concerns, the dollar fell to its lowest level in three months. Investors flocked to safe-haven currencies such as the Japanese yen or Swiss franc.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket including the yen, the euro and other currencies) was down by 0.32%, at 106.20. Meanwhile, the euro rose 0.4%, at $1.0528. The dollar fell 0.65% against the Japanese yen to 148.55.

Bitcoin, which fell 3.43% to $82,365.83, was also affected.

Investors are anxiously awaiting Friday's nonfarm payrolls data for February.

Investors were also shocked by Trump's decision to suspend military aid for Ukraine after his confrontation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in the Oval Office on Friday.

U.S. crude oil fell by 1.46%, to $67.37 per barrel. Brent was down to $70.25 a barrel on the same day. (Additional reporting from Tom Wilson in London, and Kevin Buckland, in Tokyo. Additional reporting from Iain Withers. Editing by Sonali, Christina Fincher and Gareth Jones. Jan Harvey.

(source: Reuters)