US stocks end slightly lower after day of turbulence on Wall Street
- Journalists met President Trump in the Oval Office on Monday to discuss his tariff plans.
- Trump has advocated for tariffs for decades to address trade deficits with other nations.
- Trump imposed tariffs like 24% on Japan and threatened 50% on China, prompting retaliation.
- Trump stated tariffs give power, saying, "Sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something."
- Tariffs are scheduled; officials suggest varied goals, creating uncertainty about the long-term impact.
132 Articles
132 Articles

Markets erase earlier gains after White House announces new China tariffs
TORONTO — After starting the day with major rallies, North American stock markets reversed course to erase their early gains on Tuesday as the White House confirmed it's ramping up tariffs on China. The S&P/TSX composite index was down 146.
Wall Street ‘breathes’ after Trump’s tariff falls: Nasdaq rises 3.8%
The equity markets take a break, and after having operated in red numbers for three consecutive sessions, share rates are driven by opportunity purchases.On Wall Street, the Nasdaq opens with an increase of 3.85 percent, in the 16 thousand 203.25 integers, for the S&P 500 the profit is 3.42 percent, with 5 thousand 228.91 points, and the Dow Jones with 3.10 percent goes up to 39 thousand 142.20 units.In the corporate arena, although Apple climbe…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 64% of the sources are Center
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage