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OPPPS! tRUMP’s done it again! Markets crashing, IRAs going broke…

CNBC reorts:

Stocks declined Friday after President Donald Trump ramped up his trade fight again, slapping a tariff on Apple for foreign-made iPhones and recommending new stiffer duties on the European Union.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 359 points, or 0.9%. The S&P 500 shed 0.9%, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.2%.

Apple shares shed more than 2% after Trump posted on Truth Social that iPhones sold in the U.S. must be made in the U.S. and if they are not "a tariff of at least 25% must be paid by Apple." The move against Apple by Trump is the first against a specific company in his tariff rollout this year.
Micron and Qualcomm declined 2.5% and 3.3%, respectively. Nvidia shares lost 1%.

Separately, the president said trade discussions with the EU "are going nowhere" and so he's "recommending a straight 50% tariff on the European Union, starting on June 1, 2025."

Trump's actions come at a time when tariff tensions were easing. Trump in April implemented duties on most nations in the world, which rattled the stock market and nearly put the S&P 500 in a bear market. The president then paused the stiffest tariffs for 90 days and hatched some preliminary agreements with the U.K. and China, causing stocks to recover. The S&P 500 got back to even on the year last week.

Investors were buying stocks on speculation that more agreements would be rolling out with various nations during this three-month pause period. Friday's actions by Trump could mean that hope was misplaced.

"We've had this de-escalation tailwind at the market's back for like six weeks now — and the market has had one of its best six-week stretches in the last 75 years — and a re-escalation of trade war rhetoric threatens that. I don't think we'll retest the lows or anything like that, unless it really ramps up, but this is certainly a step in the wrong direction from the market's perspective," said Ross Mayfield, investment strategist at Baird, in an interview with CNBC.

Friday's declines added to the market's weekly losses. The S&P 500, Dow and and Nasdaq are all down more than 2% this week.
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ArishMell · 70-79, M
It looks to me as if Trump never discusses any of his financial ideas with anyone who understands international manufacturing, services and money trades, and can advise him and help him plan accordingly.

To take that Apple example, it can only work as he hopes if Apple already does enough in the USA to have a fair chance of expanding production reasonably rapidly, though it would still need import some materials and components. If his actions hurt Apple's sales badly though, the drop in income could make it harder for them to expand.

Apple now, who next?

The DELL PC I am using now, and the Hewlett-Packard printer next to it, are designed and sold by American companies and use American-made software, but the printer at least was made in Asia. (I am not sure if the People's Republic of China, or Taiwan.)

While tariffs on goods imported from the EU, will do what? I had the impression the EU nations and the USA had been trading with each other quite fairly, though the EU does have stringent product standards that might make exporting to its nations, difficult.

So far all the publicity and reporting seems to focus only on manufactured goods, but there is a huge international trade in intangible "products" like entertainments, tourism and the "service industries". So how would that style of tariff work if Country A mainly sells cars and fridges to Country B, and B "exports" theatre-shows, insurance and tourists to A in return? To each nation's government the hard fact is the nation's overall earnings, more than what it makes the money on.