US stocks were sharply lower Friday as investors digested souring consumer sentiment and inflation data that showed an uptick in one of the Federal Reserve’s key gauges, underscoring the delicate state of the economy as businesses brace for President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

The Dow tumbled 750 points, or 1.77%, on Friday. The broader S&P 500 fell 2.1% and the Nasdaq Composite slid 2.8%.

. . .

Wall Street was also grappling with Trump’s announcement on Wednesday of 25% tariffs on all cars shipped into the US, set to go into effect April 3. Trump also announced tariffs on car parts like engines and transmissions, set to take effect “no later than May 3,” according to the proclamation he signed.

MBFC
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    • pleasegoaway@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      The trump regime was designed to TANK the US economy so that stocks, businesses, and industries can be bought by billionaires at rock bottom prices.

      All is going according to plan.

      • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I have an acquaintance that works for an old money, very wealthy family from oil money. The kind that influences regional as well as national politics. He worked for them during the last major recession in the late ‘00s. He basically said that his employer and all their buddies were running all over the world buying everything they could “like it is a fire sale” during the recession.

        So yeah. This is how we get more billionaires, more oligarchs, and more meta national corpo monopolies where one company controls multiple brand names.

        • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          The best we can do is to quit as soon as your company gets purchased. What they are after is the people. Specially the key role people.

          Don’t document your process. Fix things without opening change requests. That way if you assemble things the quality will drop when you leave.

          If you’re in a key role, just quit. Don’t go fucking around by deleting data. It’s better to make up data instead that seems real but is not. Never write an email that is personal or has anger in it because, even if you don’t send it, it gets saved. Same for your teams messages. You want to stay in the industry, but just quit if your company gets taken over by a billionaire.

      • 10001110101@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        Yeah, almost seems like it. I am convinced they are at least doing something like the “Mar-a-Lago Accord” to devalue the dollar, unseat the USD as the global reserve currency, inflate debt away, and make wages low enough and people desperate enough so more manufacturing is viable in the US again.

      • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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        3 days ago

        Buy it with what? Billionaires don’t hold money, their valuation is all in stock value.

        I think you’re giving them too much credit. Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by incompetence.

        • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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          2 days ago

          https://www.cbsnews.com/news/billionaire-wealth-covid-pandemic-12-trillion-jeff-bezos-wealth-tax/

          Between March 18, 2020, and March 18, 2021, the wealth held by the world’s billionaires jumped from $8.04 trillion to $12.39 trillion, according to the IPS’ analysis of data from Forbes, Bloomberg and Wealth-X. Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, the world’s wealthiest person, saw his fortune soar to $178 billion from $113 billion, or 57%, during that time, the study found. All told, the total wealth of the world’s billionaire class grew 54% during the pandemic year, IPS reported.

        • boonhet@lemm.ee
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          2 days ago

          Lol billionaires absolutely have cash too.

          It’s beneficial to keep most of it in stocks, sure, but they also get dividends, which can be used to buy more assets, or kept in waiting for a market downturn to buy even more assets.

        • Aspergillus@pawb.social
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          3 days ago

          The billionaires don’t pay for their supercars, luxury mansion, security details, cesspool social media sites, and private jets with stocks my man. They have plenty of liquidity to go around.

          • Briguy@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            False. They take out special loans only available to billionaires at less than 1% interest. They use their stock as collateral. They never pay back these loans because they don’t want to sell their stock and pay taxes in order to repay them. The banks don’t mind because they know they’re good for it. They keep doing this over and over. Their long term plan is when they die their estate will pay off their debt. That’s the recipe they use to pay zero taxes.