Wall Street tumbles, and S&P 500 drops 2% on worries about weaker economy, higher inflation

Multiple recent reports have highlighted growing fears that the economy might be slowing down.

Wall Street is experiencing another downturn on Friday due to concerns over a combination of escalating inflation and a slowing U.S. economy, driven by hesitant consumer spending amid uncertainties surrounding the global trade dispute.

The S&P 500 is currently down by 2% during afternoon trading, marking one of the most severe declines in the past two years and set to record its fifth week of losses in the last six, following the erasure of earlier gains.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 741 points, or 1.8%, as of 1:25 p.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was 2.7% lower.

Despite reporting stronger profits for the latest quarter than anticipated by analysts, Lululemon Athletica saw a 15% decrease in its stock value, contributing to the broader market decline. The company warned of potential slowdown in revenue growth for the upcoming year, citing reduced consumer spending due to mounting concerns about inflation and the overall economy, as highlighted by CEO Calvin McDonald.

Lululemon also said tariffs and shifting foreign-currency values may account for about half of its expected drop in a key measure of performance: how much profit it can squeeze out of each $1 of revenue.

Oxford Industries, the company behind the Tommy Bahama and Lilly Pulitzer brands, likewise reported stronger results for the latest quarter than expected but still saw its stock fall 3.1%. CEO Tom Chubb said it saw a “deterioration in consumer sentiment that also weighed on demand” beginning in January, which accelerated into February.

They’re discouraging data points when one of the main worries hitting Wall Street is that President Donald Trump’s trade war may cause U.S. households and businesses to freeze their spending. Even if the tariffs end up being less painful than feared, all the uncertainty may filter into changed behaviors that hurt the economy.

A report on Friday morning showed all types of U.S. consumers are getting more pessimistic about their future finances, including Republicans, independents and Democrats. Two out of three consumers surveyed by the University of Michigan expect unemployment to worsen in the year ahead. That’s the the highest reading since 2009, and it raises worries about a job market that’s been the linchpin keeping the U.S. economy solid.

Another report released in the morning also raised concerns after it showed a widely followed, underlying measure of inflation was a touch worse last month than economists expected. The data followed reports on other measures of inflation for the month, but this one is what the Federal Reserve tracks most closely as it decides what to do with interest rates.

The report also showed that an underlying measure of how much income Americans are making, which excludes government social benefits and some other items, “has been treading water for the last three months,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management.

“Households aren’t in a good place to absorb a little tariff pain,” he said. “The Fed isn’t likely to run to the rescue either as inflation moved up more than expected in February.”

The Fed has been keeping its main interest rate on hold this year after cutting it sharply in late 2024, in part because of worries about inflation remaining above its 2% target. While more cuts to rates would give the economy and financial markets a boost, they would also push upward on inflation.

The economy has so far been holding up relatively well, but if it were to weaken while inflation stays high, it would produce a worst-case scenario called “stagflation.” Policy makers in Washington have few good tools to fix it.

Some of Wall Street’s sharpest losses on Friday hit companies that need U.S. customers feeling confident enough to spend, and not just on yoga wear or dresses. Delta Air Lines lost 5.2%. Cruise operator Royal Caribbean Group fell 5.1%. Casino operator Caesars Entertainment dropped 4.6%.

On the flip side, among the relatively few rising stocks on Wall Street were those that can make money almost regardless of what the economy does, such as utilities. American Water Works rose 2.4%, for example.

Stock markets worldwide will likely remain shaky as an April 2 deadline approaches for more tariffs. That’s what Trump has called “Liberation Day,” when he will roll out tariffs tailored to the United States’ trading partners. In each case, he said the “reciprocal” tariff will match the burden the other country places on the United States, including things like value-added taxes.

In stock markets abroad, indexes fell sharply in Japan and South Korea as auto makers felt more pressure following Trump’s announcement he plans to impose 25% tariffs on auto imports. Hyundai Motor fell 2.6% in Seoul, while Honda Motor fell 2.6%, and Toyota Motor sank 2.8% in Tokyo.

On Wall Street, Ford Motor fell 2.6%, and General Motors sank 1.7%. Even U.S. automakers selling vehicles in the country can feel the pain of such tariffs because their supply chains are spread throughout North America. Trump says he wants more manufacturing to take place within the United States.

Thailand’s SET lost 1% after a powerful earthquake centered in Myanmar rattled the region, causing the prime minister to declare a state of emergency for the capital, Bangkok.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury tumbled to 4.25% from 4.38% late Thursday. It tends to fall when expectations for either U.S. economic growth or inflation are on the wane.

AP Writers Jiang Junzhe and Matt Ott contributed.

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