Stock
Market Posts Worst Week in Months on Renewed Economic Fears
Data
showing cracks in the U.S. labor market and President Trump’s newest barrage of
tariffs shook investors around the world, weighing on stocks, the dollar and
more.
Danielle
Kaye
By
Danielle Kaye
Aug. 1,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/01/business/economy/trump-tariffs-stock-markets-trade-dollar.html
After
months of rallying and periods of relative calm, stocks tumbled on Friday as
fresh economic data reflected unexpected signs of weakness in the labor market
and President Trump announced steep new tariffs against some of America’s
largest trading partners.
The
S&P 500 ended the day down 1.6 percent, capping one of the index’s worst
weeks since Mr. Trump wrought chaos across the global trading system when he
unveiled his first round of steep tariffs in April. The benchmark fell 2.4
percent for the week.
On
Friday, investors parsed through the president’s latest tariff plans and how
they might further drive up costs for companies and consumers. But it was a
report from the Labor Department that caused the most alarm.
U.S.
employers added 73,000 jobs in July, fewer than the roughly 100,000 that
economists had expected, and the unemployment rate rose slightly. The report
also revised down the data on hiring from May and June by a combined 258,000
jobs, suggesting the labor market was under greater strain than initially
believed.
The
weaker-than-expected hiring data, particularly the large downward revisions for
May and June, raised concerns about the strength of the economy under Mr. Trump
and created new uncertainty about the timing of the Federal Reserve’s next
interest rate cut.
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With the
stock market swooning and his critics raising new questions about the efficacy
of his economic policies, Mr. Trump took the extraordinary step of publicly
calling into the question the veracity of the hiring data. In a social media
post on Friday afternoon, he blamed, without evidence, a Biden administration
appointee in the Bureau of Labor Statistics for producing faulty numbers.
Mr.
Trump’s charge did little to soothe investors’ concerns about the economy,
however, as the market remained lower throughout the afternoon.
“This is
the first eye-opening bad number,” said Mark Hackett, chief market strategist
at Nationwide. “It’s a reminder that volatility still exists.”
Investors
had been “lulled into a sense of complacency” over the past few months as
stocks surged, Mr. Hackett added. The market rally was headed for a pause, he
said, but “the payroll number really changes the conversation.”
As
recently as Wednesday, Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, described the labor
market as “solid” when explaining the central bank’s decision to keep holding
interest rates steady.
For Wall
Street, the data on Friday cast fresh skepticism on that assessment.
The yield
on 10-year Treasury bonds slid more than a tenth of a percentage point, a large
move in that market that reflected expectations for lower rates. (Yields move
inversely to prices.) The dollar also dropped sharply against other major
currencies.
Traders’
bets on a September rate cut rose to more than 90 percent on Friday, up from
roughly 40 percent the day before, according to CME FedWatch.
The Trump
administration also seized on the weak hiring numbers to continue to hammer Mr.
Powell to cut rates soon, to jolt economic growth. Posting on social media, Mr.
Trump said Mr. Powell should “substantially” lower rates. If he doesn’t, the
Fed board should “assume control,” the president said.
Friday’s
losses were steepest in the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite index, which fell
2.2 percent. Stocks in Asia and Europe also lost ground on Friday.
The
declines put a damper on a weekslong rally, supported by solid corporate
earnings from many major technology companies. But the downward shift on Friday
— the fourth consecutive daily drop for the S&P 500 — echoed Wall Street’s
tariff-induced meltdown in April.
Back
then, rounds of selling pushed the index to the brink of a bear market, before
Mr. Trump paused his most punitive tariffs. By late June, the S&P 500 had
surged to a record high and regained all the ground it lost in March and early
April.
Analysts
have noted that market declines fueled by fears of tariffs have tended to give
way to rallies, as deadlines were extended or altered. But now that steeper
tariffs are set to take effect on Thursday, a renewed escalation of Mr. Trump’s
global trade war — coupled with signs of weakness in the economy — is injecting
volatility into financial markets again.
“It’s
kind of a warning sign about where the economy might be headed,” said Greg
McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate. “The labor market is not nearly
on a solid footing as we had thought.”
Eshe
Nelson and Kailyn Rhone contributed reporting.
Danielle
Kaye is a Times reporter, covering business and policy for the DealBook
newsletter.


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