CNBC Business News Update - Market Midday: Stocks Lower, Trump Threatens Reciprocal Tariffs Could Begin Today, Fewer Jobs Created Last Month 3/7/25
Episode Date: March 7, 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. Market losses are building this afternoon. President Trump threatening new tariffs on Canada and making some changes about when reciprocal tariffs may start.
Major averages all in the red this afternoon. The Dow down 227 points, a half percent, led lower by shares of Boeing, which are down five percent.
The S&P 500 index down 43 points, three-quarters percent.
The NASDAQ tanking 180 points, that's one percent.
The Dow is heading for its worst week in nearly two years on Trump trade policy uncertainty.
Fewer jobs were created in the U.S. last month than expected at 151,000.
The unemployment rate ticked higher to 4.1 percent.
For everybody this is a, you know, so far so good relief kind of number, but much more
to come given the kinds of uncertainties and policy moves that we're waiting to see.
Former Federal Reserve Vice Chair Roger Ferguson on CNBC.
CNBC's senior economics reporter Steve
Leesman says this is likely the calm before the employment storm as the solid labor market
could soon crack.
Whatever happened in the period leading up to the date, the cutoff date, which was the
12th, was okay.
But didn't most of the government job cuts come after that? It's all after that.
And what we're going to learn is the importance of this stability in Washington when it comes
to policy to private sector hiring.
We're going to learn and we're learning, I was talking to our next guest on this, Joe
LaVonia about this, how much government spending matters inside not just the government sector
but the private sector as well. And Treasury Secretary Scott Besant on CNBC today saying the economy is slowing and a detox
period is coming. Starting to roll a bit sure and look there's going to be a natural adjustment as
we move away from public spending to private spending, the market and the economy have just become hooked.
We've become addicted to this government spending
and there's gonna be a detox period.
Here's a take on that from CNBC's
Squawk on the Street hosts David Faber,
Jim Cramer, and Carl Quintanilla.
The detox period, the president calls it a disturbance,
he calls it an adjustment.
The prediction, pain. And when you have a prediction, pain calls it an adjustment. The prediction? Pain.
And when you have a prediction, pain, then you're going to get what we have, which is
that everything's mixed, even when we get a number, a series of numbers that I actually
liked.
We can't keep the game.
No, forecast calls for pain.
Yes, forecast calls for pain.
Broadcom shares jumping on strong quarterly results today. Gap shares soaring on its results.
The brands appear to be in favor like Old Navy and Ethlita.
Walgreens shares popping after the drugstore chain said it struck a deal to be
bought by private equity firm Sycamore Partners.
It's National Day of Unplugging and National Economic Blackout Day,
a social media movement urging consumers to avoid shopping today with major retailers.
Its Employee Appreciation Day and New in Theaters, Warner Bros. Mickey 17, Jessica Edinger, CNBC.