CNBC Business News Update - Market Midday: Stocks Lower And Bouncing On Tariff News, Tariff Pause for Mexico, Investors Worry About Job Market Stability 3/6/25
Episode Date: March 6, 2025From Wall Street to Main Street, the latest on the markets and what it means for your money. Updated regularly on weekdays, featuring CNBC expert analysis and sound from top business newsmakers. Ancho...red by CNBC's Jessica Ettinger.
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I'm Jessica Edinger CNBC a little bit of a recovery for the major averages on Wall Street after this morning's ugly losses.
Now that President Trump says he's pausing tariffs on some Mexican imports until April 2nd the Dow down 375 points.
It's about 1%. That's a bit of a recovery. The S&P 500 index down 82 points, 1.5%. The
Nasdaq plunging 328 points. That's almost 2%. Mexico getting a little break on tariffs
for the moment.
Mexico will not be required to pay tariffs on anything that falls under the USMCA agreement.
Until April 2nd, that's when those reciprocal tariffs will begin.
We still have to wait and see on Canada.
The White House told me that conversation
is sort of ongoing.
CNBC's Megan Casella in Washington.
But investors are scratching their heads
over the tariffs on goods coming in from Canada.
It's tariffs.
It's the concern ultimately about what that's gonna mean
for the economy.
Canadians not traveling to the US this year.
We got their liquor stores pulling U.S. liquor.
We got Doug Ford, the Premier of Ontario,
pulling the Starlink deal,
the second biggest market for Starlink.
Meanwhile, 25% tariffs on Canada
is going to be horrible for their economy.
It's going to crush them.
Yeah. Paul Ryan Reynolds, he's like the greatest.
This is a celebrity presidency.
CNBC Mad Money host Jim Kramer
with CNBC's Carl Quintanilla and David Faber. Job cut announcements soared to their highest
in five years as Elon Musk and Doge slash federal workers announced job cuts in February
surging by 245% to the highest level since the pandemic, with the Trump administration's efforts
to reduce the federal workforce playing,
not the only, but the biggest part in that.
The outplacement firm Challenger Grey Christmas,
they're saying that announced February layoffs
rose to 172,000.
It's the highest monthly number since July 2020,
the worst February since 2009.
The bulk of government job cuts are likely too recent to show up in tomorrow's jobs report.
Workers won't be counted as unemployed until their severance runs out.
CNBC senior economics reporter Steve Leesman.
The VA, Veterans Administration, and the Education Department appear to be next on the chopping
block.
Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency now has a list of nearly 600 contracts at the VA
to be canceled.
The Doge agency acknowledged that some of the canceled
contracts had already been fully paid for.
Chrysler, Jeep, and Dodge parents, Delantis,
publicly thanking President Trump for granting
the one month exemption on tariffs on autos.
Millions of cars sold in the U.S.
are assembled in Canada and Mexico,
and more than half the parts on some popular models
are shipped from those countries.
Macy's shares lowered a day,
even though the retailer swung to a profit
in the fourth quarter, sales dipped in the holiday quarter
and came in below expectations.
Its forecast for this year is cloudy
with an uncertain U.S. consumer.
Jessica Ettinger, CNBC.