Skip to main content

Stocks fall as China threatens to retaliate for new tariffs

Stocks tumbled Friday toward their worst week of 2019, as investors fretted over an escalating trade war with China.

The Dow Jones industrial average slid 334.18 points to 26,249.22 at its lowest point Friday after China vowed to retaliate over threatened US tariffs on another $300 billion worth of Chinese goods.

“We don’t want to fight, but we aren’t afraid to,” a spokeswoman for China’s foreign minister said. “If America does pass these tariffs then China will have to take the necessary countermeasures to protect the country’s core and fundamental interests.”

The S&P closed down 0.7 percent, marking its worst week this year. The Dow Jones industrial average capped off its second worst week of 2019 after recovering somewhat to close down 98.41 points, or 0.4 percent,

China’s backlash follows several weeks of trade talks between the two countries that resulted in little breakthrough. The truce was broken Thursday when President Trump, who has been concerned about China stealing US technology, tweeted that he plans to impose a 10 percent tax on another $300 billion worth of Chinese goods.

Analysts say the threatened round of tariffs would hit US consumers hard because it would tax the remaining $300 billion in Chinese imports that are currently tariff free.

“Total tariffs on Chinese imports could cost the average family about $1,500 per year — effectively a tax on consumers that will slow the economy,” said Dan North, chief economist at Euler Hermes North America.

Shares of iPhone maker Apple fell 2.2 percent to $203.90 as analysts warned that the tech giant, which assembles its iPhones in China, would be vulnerable to a price increase.

Apple could see iPhone profits take a $0.30 to $0.50 per share hit if the tariffs are enacted, according to rough estimates by Bank of America Merrill Lynch analysts,

Shares of jeans maker Levi Strauss, by contrast, jumped 3.1 percent to $18.88 after Reuters reported that the company has been moving production out of China due to the growing uncertainty hanging over goods imported from that country.

Levi’s Chief Executive Officer Chip Bergh told Reuters that just 1 percent to 2 percent of the company’s products sold in the US are manufactured in China — compared to 16 percent two years ago.

The tariff war of words had investors so rattled Friday that they ignored an otherwise positive jobs report.

“Today’s market action illustrates that the jobs report has been rendered virtually meaningless in the face of a worsening tariff situation,” said Kristina Hooper, Chief Global Market Strategist at Invesco. “And the stock market sell-off is actually less worrisome than what is happening in the Treasury market.”

The 10-year Treasury note yield fell to $1.8550 Friday. Yields move in the opposite direction to price.

Credit: Source link

The post Stocks fall as China threatens to retaliate for new tariffs appeared first on Fox USA Live.



from Fox USA Live https://ift.tt/2MKhtN9

Comments

Popular

LPGA's most dominant player this season wins first major title

Jin Young Ko had dominated throughout the early season, only her second on the LPGA Tour. Third place or better in four of five events. No. 1 on the money list. Easily the best finisher on tour this year. Now, the 23-year-old South Korean can add a major championship to her lustrous resume. Playing... from latimes.com - Los Angeles Times http://www.latimes.com/sports/more/la-sp-ana-inspiration-round-4-20190407-story.html>

Review: Animated ‘Chance’ takes on dog fighting with overly earnest yet well-intended spirit

The CG animated feature “Chance” is a well-intended but heavy-handed denunciation of the barbaric blood sport of dog fighting. The title character (voiced by Will Canon) is a dreamer of a pit bull, who believes in a canine god and a peaceful place where “Hatonas” (dogs) can live idyllic lives.... from latimes.com - Los Angeles Times http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-mini-chance-review-20190403-story.html>

Convicted rapist killer strikes again after getting out of jail

A convicted rapist killer who strangled a teen in 1981 and was suspected of cutting out the eyes out of an earlier victim has been arrested on a new rape charge, six years after he got out of jail. Christopher “Crazy Chris” Aniades, 62, is being held on an attempted forcible rape charge after he allegedly attacked the victim, according to the city Department of Correction. He’s being held at the Eric. M Taylor Center in Queens on first degree attempted rape, according to the city Department of Correction website. His arrest on Aug. 2 was based on a warrant issued by the state’s Division of Parole. The NYPD and the state DOC said they couldn’t provide details on Aniades’ latest offense. Aniades, who was released on Aug. 20, 2013 after spending more than 30 years in jail, became a poster boy of the violent 1980s in New York, when homicides routinely reached 2,000 a year. He was sentenced to 25-years to life for abducting, raping and killing 19-year-old Doreen Vitale on Oct. 15 198...