Stocks closed in the green, eking out a small gain Friday and snapping a four-week losing streak. After opening sharply lower, leading indexes moved higher in afternoon trading, buoyed by President Trump suggesting he's willing to be flexible as the U.S. negotiates over tariffs with trading partners. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Complex each ended up 0.1%, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.5%. The reversal amounts to a break from the recent gloom that has settled over financial markets.
Main Idea: U.S. stocks dipped and looked set for another rough week as Donald Trump’s tariff plans and weaker economic outlook kept investors on edge.
Key Points:
Tariff fights and slower growth can raise market swings, hurt retirement savings, and make hiring and business spending more cautious.
Flexible trade talks could ease some pressure on prices and help steady markets for households and small businesses.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central political actor whose tariff flexibility and trade policies are a main driver of the market reaction.
Major company singled out for warning signs about slowing revenues and weaker profit guidance.
Cited for a survey showing institutional investors shifting out of U.S. equities.
Quoted market commentator explaining investor anxiety and selling pressure.
Named Fed official quoted on slower growth and immigration effects.
Investment research firm quoted on recession risk and valuation pressure.
Employer of a quoted commentator providing market context.
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