“I’ll be announcing that next week,” said Trump during a meeting with the visiting Japanese Prime Minister. “We’ll have a news conference and lay it out pretty simple.”#GlobalMarkets | US: Markets closed lower Friday as inflation and tariff fears spur a sell-off
— ET NOW (@ETNOWlive) February 8, 2025
Here are the updates! 👇 pic.twitter.com/9BfPLJ1DD3
Stocks To Watch | 📊Ready, set, trade! Keep an eye on these stocks as they set the market abuzz #StockMarket pic.twitter.com/nITJhcDz1S
— ET NOW (@ETNOWlive) February 7, 2025
The stock market was already on edge before Trump’s comments, as earlier consumer sentiment and job data pointed to a pickup in inflation. The yield on the 10-year Treasury spiked above 4.5% at its session high. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index preliminary reading reached 71.3. At the same time, the same report showed respondents anticipate the one-year inflation rate to hit 4.3%, the highest since November 2023. January’s jobs report showed that the unemployment rate fell to 4% from 4.1% and that average hourly earnings last month were higher than expected. After revenue growth forecasts disappointed investors, Amazon shares lost 4%, overshadowing better-than-expected fourth-quarter results. “We’ve just had some disappointments in the traditionally non-disappointing tech or ‘Magnificent Seven’ areas, and I think we’re seeing some rotation away from those groups,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research. I don’t think we’re heading for a bear market, but expect some volatility and short-term disappointment. The market has had a volatile week. Stocks fell on Monday after Trump announced 10% tariffs on China and proposed, then later paused, 25% levies on Canada and Mexico.🇺🇸UMich Consumer #Sentiment eased 4.6% in early February — lowest reading since Jul 24
— Gregory Daco (@GregDaco) February 7, 2025
⚠️"Decline was pervasive" across age, wealth & political affiliation with worries that high inflation will return
🔻Current Conditions -7.1%
🔻Expectations -2.9% pic.twitter.com/AJXLTc1FB1