Dow drops nearly 300 points after Trump teases 35% tariff on Canada, new threat to EU
WASHINGTON — Stocks plunged Friday after President Trump floated a 35% tariff on Canadian goods not governed by the USMCA trade pact — while threatening a new dictated levy on the European Union.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 279 points, or about .63% — with narrower losses by the S&P 500, which had notched a record high Thursday, and the Nasdaq composite.
The slouch was slight compared to the market reaction to Trump’s initial “Liberation Day” announcement of “reciprocal” tariffs on April 2.
Most trade with Canada, America’s second-largest trading partner behind Mexico, is governed by the deal that Trump brokered in his first term, but the remaining items would be hit with the 35% rate, Trump wrote on social media Thursday.
“Instead of working with the United States, Canada retaliated with its own Tariffs,” he wrote. “Starting August 1, 2025, we will charge Canada a Tariff of 35% on Canadian products sent into the United States, separate from all Sectoral Tariffs.”
