Stocks
Erase Losses From April Tariff Chaos
Wall Street
has recovered from April’s sharp sell-off, buoyed by hope for trade talks. But
the economic fallout from President Trump’s policies still has investors on
edge.
April 30May
1May 25,
Danielle
Kaye
By Danielle
Kaye
May 2, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/02/business/stock-market-recovery-trump-tariffs.html
Stocks on
Friday erased losses suffered in the days after President Trump’s chaotic
rollout of tariffs in early April, bolstered in part by a healthy report on the
labor market.
The S&P
500 rose 1.5 percent on Friday, climbing back above where it stood before chaos
descended on financial markets after April 2 — Mr. Trump’s so-called Liberation
Day, which featured his most sweeping tariffs to date.
Friday’s
boost to stock prices followed a stronger-than-expected report on hiring in
April. But the S&P 500 has been edging higher for days — logging nine
consecutive daily increases — as Mr. Trump and members of his administration
raised hopes that trade tensions would ease, including by indicating they were
willing to engage in talks with China.
Early
Friday, China’s commerce ministry said in a statement that it, too, was
considering holding talks with the Trump administration, but only if Washington
canceled its tariffs on Chinese goods first.
The two
countries remain far from any deal that would resolve their trade war, but even
the prospect of talks has been enough to ease the worst of the anxiety that
gripped investors a month ago.
“If the
labor market holds up and the Trump administration walks back the most
egregious tariffs, the economy could skirt a deep recession,” said Jeffrey
Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial.
Still,
despite the recent optimism and recovery, the S&P 500 is more than 7
percent below its recent high in mid-February. It has fallen about 5 percent
since Mr. Trump’s inauguration in January.
Questions
remain about whether Mr. Trump’s tariffs might cause a sharp slowdown in
economic growth, which could result if companies start pulling back on hiring,
spending and investments amid the uncertainty. As they have reported quarterly
earnings in recent days, many companies have said they are struggling to
forecast how the rest of the year will shape up because of the lack of clarity
on trade policy. Several consumer companies have said they’ll have to raise
prices — which could further dent the economy if it discourages spending.
Though Mr.
Trump backed off the most extreme tariffs on dozens of countries, many imports
into the United States now face new taxes of at least 10 percent, while
products from China are being taxed a minimum of 145 percent. On Friday, a
provision that had allowed for low-value shipments from mainland China and Hong
Kong to evade tariffs altogether closed. And on Saturday, new tariffs of 25
percent on imported auto parts are expected to take effect. That’s in addition
to a tax of 25 percent on imported cars that already took effect in April.
Volatility
in recent weeks has underscored the degree to which sentiment on Wall Street is
still driven by concern about the economic fallout from the Trump
administration’s policies. Mr. Trump’s 90-day pause of many of the tariffs that
he announced on April 2 will end in July.
“The damage
to economic momentum has already been done,” said Mike Sanders, head of fixed
income at Madison Investments. “Deals may come, but the real question is how
long the data will take to reflect the harm.”
Danielle
Kaye is a Times business reporter and a 2024 David Carr Fellow, a program for
journalists early in their careers.

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