CNBC Business News Update - Market Midday: Stocks Mixed, India May Lower Tariffs On US Goods, Boeing May Withdraw Guilty Plea 3/25/25
Episode Date: March 25, 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Jessica Edinger CNBC. Wall Street's turned mixed this afternoon. We've got the Dow in
the red now down 18 points being led lower by shares of Walmart, which are down two and
a half percent. The S and P 500 index still has its head above water. It's up three points.
The NASDAQ up 50 points checking shares of Nvidia. They are down about a half percent this afternoon.
The market's moving on a daily basis based on tariffs, but it's also doge and it's uncertainty
with some of these administrative policies.
That's Rose advisors at Hightower's Patrick Fruzzetti on CNBC. The Trump administration
looking at a two-step approach to implementing tariffs. This is according to the Financial Times.
The FT says that the White House is looking at launching investigations into trading partners
while implementing seldom-used emergency powers to apply immediate tariffs in the interim.
The report says that those powers could fall under the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act, or Section 338 of the Tariff Act of 1930 to hit trading partners
with tariffs of up to 50 percent.
Again, all of this is kind of in play in motion.
We're waiting to see what happens before the day that President Trump himself has set as
D-Day for tariffs, and that would be next Wednesday.
CNBC's Becky Quick.
India reportedly considering a tariff cut on US goods it imports to try
to head off tariffs on its exports to America.
Boeing wants to withdraw its guilty plea in the long-running criminal case that blamed
the company for deceiving regulators before two deadly crashes of 737 MAX jets. This is
according to the Wall Street Journal. The crashes occurred outside of the U.S.
and they killed nearly 350 people.
If we think that the Justice Department
is the same Justice Department as you got with Biden,
I think that's the advice to think that.
Yeah, no, it's definitely a very different
Justice Department without a doubt.
Well, that means that if I were Boeing,
I'd roll the dice. Justice might say, you know what? They've done a lot of good. Let's let's
let them out of it. CNBC Med Money host Jim Cramer with CNBC's David Faber. The
23andMe bankruptcy filing fueling new privacy fears for people who gave their
DNA to the company and whose data breach assisted in its fall. For the first time
in nearly 10 years at Berkshire H Hathaway employee claimed Warren Buffett's
million dollar grand prize for his company's
NCAA bracket contest.
An anonymous staffer at Berkshire's subsidiary,
Flight Safety International, won by correctly calling
31 of 32 games.
The Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffett, who's 94 now,
was finally able to give out the
big prize after relaxing the rules multiple times since the company game started in 2016.
Jessica Edinger, CNBC.
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