S&P 500 rallies 2% as Wall Street’s roller-coaster ride whips back upward
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NEW YORK — Wall Street’s roller-coaster ride created by President Trump’s trade policies whipped back upward on Tuesday, this time because of a delay for his tariffs on the European Union.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index leaped 2% in its first trading since Trump said Sunday that the United States will delay a 50% tariff on goods coming from the EU until July 9 from June 1. The EU’s chief trade negotiator later said Monday that he had “good calls” with Trump officials and that the EU was “fully committed” to reaching a trade deal by July 9.
The Dow Jones industrial average jumped 740 points, or 1.8%, and the Nasdaq composite rallied 2.5%. They more than recovered their losses from Friday, when Wall Street’s roller coaster dropped after Trump announced the tariffs on France, Germany and the other 25 countries represented by the EU.
Such talks give hopes that the U.S. can reach a deal with one of its largest trading partners that would keep global commerce moving and avoid a possible recession. Trump declared a similar pause this month on his stiff tariffs for products from China, which launched an even bigger rally on Wall Street at the time.
“We focus on actions over words,” Jean Boivin and other strategists at BlackRock Investment Institute said, “as economic constraints spur policy rollbacks.”
Caution remains on Wall Street, of course, even if the S&P 500 has climbed back within 3.6% of its record after falling roughly 20% below the mark last month.
A worry is that all the uncertainty caused by on-again, off-again tariffs could damage the economy by pushing U.S. households and businesses to freeze their spending and investments. Surveys have shown that U.S. consumers are feeling worse about the economy’s prospects and where inflation may be heading because of tariffs.
On Tuesday, though, optimism ruled. The stock market’s gains accelerated after a report released by the Conference Board said confidence among U.S. consumers improved by more in May than economists expected.
It was the first increase in six months, and consumers’ expectations for income, business and the job market in the short term jumped sharply, though it still remains below the level that typically signals a recession ahead. About half the survey results came after Trump paused some of his tariffs on China.
The rise in confidence was widespread, covering different age and income groups, according to the Conference Board.
On Wall Street, Nvidia rallied 3.2% and was the strongest single force driving the S&P 500 higher ahead of its profit report coming Wednesday. It’s the last to report this quarter among the “Magnificent Seven” Big Tech companies that have grown so large that their stock movements dominate the rest of the market.
Nvidia has been riding a tidal wave of growth created by the frenzy around artificial-intelligence technology, but it is also facing criticism that its stock price has shot too high.
Informatica climbed 6% after Salesforce said it would buy the AI-powered cloud data management company in an all-stock deal valuing it at about $8 billion. Salesforce rose 1.5%.
They were part of widespread gains across the U.S. stock market, where 93% of the stocks within the S&P 500 rose.
One of the outliers was AutoZone, which fell 3.7% following a mixed report on its performance for the three months through May 10. Its profit fell short of analysts’ expectations, though its growth in revenue was stronger than expected.
Chief Executive Phil Daniele said both its DIY and commercial businesses did well domestically, but shifting moves in foreign-currency values put pressure on the retailer’s operations outside the United States.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 118.72 points to 5,921.54. The Dow Jones industrial average added 740.58 to 42,343.65, and the Nasdaq composite gained 461.96 to 19,199.16.
In the bond market, Treasury yields eased to take some of the pressure off the stock market. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.44% from 4.51% late Friday. It had been rising last week, in part because of worries about the U.S. government’s rapidly increasing debt.
Yields had been climbing for bond markets around the developed world, particularly in Japan, where a recent auction of longer-term bonds found relatively few buyers. But analysts said worries eased a bit after Japan’s Ministry of Finance sent a questionnaire to bond investors that they took as a signal of efforts to calm the market.
In stock markets abroad, European indexes mostly rose, while Asian indexes were mixed.
Choe writes for the Associated Press.
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