amid tariff
US stocks retreat from record highs amid tariff tensions with Canada
U.S. stocks dipped on Friday, pulling the S&P 500 back from its all-time high as the Trump administration ramped up tariff threats against Canada.
The S&P 500 was down 0.3% in midday trading, a day after reaching a record. The benchmark index is on track for its first weekly loss in three weeks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 331 points, or 0.7%, and the Nasdaq composite slipped 0.1%, both also poised to end the week lower.
Bond yields rose, with the 10-year Treasury yield increasing to 4.41% from 4.34% late Thursday.
In a letter to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Thursday, President Donald Trump announced a sharp increase in tariffs on Canadian imports, raising rates to 35%, up from the previous 25%. The move further strained trade relations with Canada, a historically close ally.
The White House’s strategy aims to pressure countries into trade deals through tariff threats. Although Wednesday was set as the original deadline, the negotiation window has been extended to August 1. So far, only the UK and Vietnam have reached deals with the U.S.
Trump also floated the possibility of 200% tariffs on pharmaceutical imports and imposed a 50% tariff on copper, aligning it with steel and aluminum duties.
Despite earlier market disruptions caused by tariff policies, recent market reactions have been relatively calm. “Markets appear to believe that Trump will again back down,” said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics. “We are not so sure.”
Asian markets mixed as Trump administration pushes new tariff deadlines
Attention is now shifting to corporate earnings. Levi Strauss rose 9.2% after strong earnings and an improved outlook. PriceSmart climbed 4.6% following solid Q3 results and potential expansion plans in Chile.
Next week, major banks including JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup will report earnings, with S&P 500 companies expected to post 5% earnings growth for Q2— the slowest pace since Q4 of 2023.
Financials, health care, and communication services weighed on markets Friday. Visa fell 2.4%, Gilead Sciences lost 3.7%, and Meta declined 1%. Nvidia, however, gained 1.2%.
Airline stocks dipped despite strong earnings from Delta Air Lines: Delta dropped 1.9%, United 4.2%, and American 4.2%.
T-Mobile shares slipped 0.7% after the U.S. Justice Department allowed its $4.4 billion acquisition of U.S. Cellular to proceed. U.S. Cellular gained 3.2%.
Red Cat Holdings surged 19.8% following orders from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to ramp up drone production.
European markets also traded lower after mostly down sessions in Asia.
Meanwhile, bitcoin hit a new all-time high Friday, briefly surpassing $118,000 before settling near $116,683. The rally coincides with Nvidia reaching a $4 trillion valuation and anticipation ahead of U.S. Congress’ Crypto Week beginning July 14.
4 months ago