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Home » Trump tariffs live updates: US and Asia stock market plummets amid recession fears – UK Times
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Trump tariffs live updates: US and Asia stock market plummets amid recession fears – UK Times

By uk-times.com11 March 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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Donald Trump refuses to rule out possibility of recession in Fox News interview

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Wall Street fears over the possible repercussions of Donald Trump’s chaotic tariff war with Canada, Mexico and China sent the stock market spiralling on Monday, with only a slight late rebound saving it from suffering a historically bad day.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a loss of 890 points but at one stage was down 1,000, which would have put it in the top 20 worst days in market history.

The Nasdaq meanwhile tanked 4.2 percent, its biggest single-day percentage drop since September 2022, and the bellwether S&P 500 closed below its 200-day moving average for the first time since November 2023.

The sell-off continued early on Tuesday in Asian markets as investors around the world grappled with Trump’s erratic manoeuvres and his indication during a weekend interview with Fox News that the U.S. economy could be in for a recession.

The president has meanwhile pledged to buy a “brand new Tesla” in support of his embattled billionaire ally and adviser Elon Musk, who endured a torrid start to the week in which he lost $18.8bn of his personal net worth and saw X suffer a major cyberattack.

FTSE 100 plummets amid fears of U.S. recession

The London stock market fell 79.66 points yesterday, a 0.92 percent drop, closing at 8,600.22.

Here’s more on how the ripples were felt across the Atlantic.

Joe Sommerlad11 March 2025 09:55

Stock market suffers ‘worst day of 2025’ as Trump’s trade war sparks panicked sell-off

Wall Street fears over the possible repercussions of Trump’s chaotic tariff war with Canada, Mexico and China sent the stock market spiralling on Monday, with only a slight late rebound saving it from suffering a historically bad day.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a loss of 890 points but at one stage was down 1,000, which would have put it in the top 20 worst days in market history.

The Nasdaq meanwhile tanked 4.2 percent, its biggest single-day percentage drop since September 2022, and the bellwether S&P 500 closed below its 200-day moving average for the first time since November 2023.

The sell-off continued early on Tuesday in Asian markets as investors around the world grappled with Trump’s erratic manoeuvres and his indication during a weekend interview with Fox News that the U.S. economy could be in for a recession.

Chinese, Japanese and Australian stock markets all fell on Tuesday with Japan’s Nikkei 225 index dropping about 2 percent.

South Korea’s Kospi fell as much as 3 percent.

Even Fox was concerned yesterday and some were minded to recall Trump’s attacks on the Biden administration’s handling of the economy last summer.

There were also some pretty stunning MAGA defenses of the president, from Newsmax’s Rob Schmitt praising him for having the “balls” to act against America’s top trading and partners and Alabama Republican Senator Tommy Tuberville appearing to suggest that the stock market had become too “bloated” in any case.

Here’s the latest from Rhian Lubin.

Joe Sommerlad11 March 2025 09:35

Trump rebukes ‘tariff abuser’ Canada, threatens to primary Republican rebel and promotes Apprentice reruns on Prime

Also on Truth Social, the president has been attacking the Canadian province of Ontario after it upped levies on the electricity it supplies to the American states of Minnesota, Michigan and New York, hitting Trump where it hurts.

“Canada is a Tariff abuser, and always has been, but the United States is not going to be subsidizing Canada any longer,” he fumed.

“We don’t need your Cars, we don’t need your Lumber, we don’t your Energy, and very soon, you will find that out.”

The president also said that rebel Republican representative Thomas Massie “should be primaried” (“…and I will lead the charge against him”), calling him “just another grandstander” and likening him to Liz Cheney.

Before that, he was welcoming Jeff Bezos’s decision to make old episodes of The Apprentice available on Prime Video.

Here’s more on Ontario’s fightback against Trump’s tariff aggressions.

Joe Sommerlad11 March 2025 09:15

Trump pledges to buy Tesla as ‘show of support’ for Elon Musk

The president was up late last night on Truth Social speaking up for his billionaire adviser Elon Musk after he endured a torrid day on Monday in which his personal net worth sank by at least $18.8bn as Tesla’s share price slumped and X suffered a major cyberattack.

Trump insisted Musk is doing “a fantastic job” in firing federal employees and scrapping aid programs and should not pay the price for assisting his administration, even pledging to go down to his nearest Tesla showroom to buy one today as a show of support/marketing stunt (he doesn’t even drive, does he?)

Musk was also generously promoted on Fox News too, with Sean Hannity appearing to be talking himself into buying a Tesla as well.

Here’s Mike Bedigan on Elon’s bad day yesterday.

Joe Sommerlad11 March 2025 08:55

How low must Donald Trump sink before adoring Tories call him out?

Almost a decade ago, when his first campaign for the presidency was a mere publicity stunt, Donald Trump amused his audience at a meeting at Dordt College, Sioux Center, Iowa with a rather prescient quip: “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any voters, OK? It’s, like, incredible.”

It illuminates a question that becomes more pressing, more puzzling and more depressing with every passing day of the second Trump presidency. Exactly what does this despot have to do for some people to call him out? Hopefully, not a homicide in cold blood in New York City – but still…

Sean O’Grady11 March 2025 07:00

VOICES: Mark Carney is the man Canada needs to challenge Trump

In Michael Wolff’s new book, All or Nothing, about Donald Trump’s resounding election victory, he describes how, for a long time, the new US president thought he had no chance.

Trump assumed that Joe Biden would not stay the course, but expected Michelle Obama to take his place. Trump was afraid of her. He did not relish confronting the smart Princeton University and Harvard Law School graduate.

Now, Canada’s Liberal Party has just chosen another Michelle Obama-esque person as its prime minister. Mark Carney might lack Obama’s obvious empathy and touch, but he is similarly rigorous, intellectually equipped, capable of fighting untruth with fact – and able to master technical detail. Self-assured and confident, he is just the sort of opponent Trump struggles with.

Mark Carney is the man Canada needs to challenge Trump

The former governor of the Bank of England will be a formidable opponent, writes Chris Blackhurst. From economic expertise to climate advocacy, Carney represents a new kind of challenge for the US president – with plenty of surprises in store

Chris Blackhurst11 March 2025 06:00

Asian shares dip in an echo of Wall Street’s sell-off amid alarm over Trump’s tariffs

Asian benchmarks dove Tuesday, as worries grew about the ripple effects from President Donald Trump’s tariffs on regional economies and companies.

The stock fall in Asia echoed the sell-off on Wall Street, where investors are raising questions on how much pain Trump will let the economy endure through tariffs and other policies in order to get what he wants.

Sonal Hayat11 March 2025 05:40

Homeland Security overhauls asylum phone app — now it’s for ‘self-deportation’

The Trump administration has unveiled an overhauled cellphone app once used to let migrants apply for asylum, turning it into a system that allows people living illegally in the U.S. to say they want to leave the country voluntarily.

The renamed app, announced Monday and now called CBP Home, is part of the administration’s campaign to encourage “self-deportations, ” touted as an easy and cost-effective way to nudge along President Donald Trump’s push to deport millions of immigrants without legal status.

“The app provides illegal aliens in the United States with a straightforward way to declare their intent to voluntarily depart, offering them the chance to leave before facing harsher consequences,” Pete Flores, the acting commissioner for U.S Customs and Border Protection, said in a statement.

Lauren Boebert slammed over ‘pimp cane’ insult directed at censured Democrat Al Green

In an interview with right-wing outlet Real America’s Voice, the Colorado congresswoman accused Green, who is Black, of shaking “his pimp cane” at the president, after he stood to give a vocal protest.

The Texas rep, 77, was escorted from the chamber by the Sergeant at Arms after repeatedly shouting “you have no mandate” at Trump. Green later told reporters: “It’s worth it to let people know that there are some people who are going to stand up” to Trump.

Mike Bedigan11 March 2025 04:00

NASA lays off top scientist and deputies as it implements DOGE’s job cuts that will see hundreds leave space agency

In an email sent out on Monday and shared on social media, Acting Administrator Janet Petro said the agency’s reductions were phased and occur in advance of a reorganization plan.

“We will close NASA’s Office of Technology, Policy, and Strategy, the Office of the Chief Scientist, and the Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility branch in the Office of Diversity and Equal Opportunity, along with reducing their workforce,” said Petro.

Julia Musto11 March 2025 03:00

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