ISTANBUL, April 5 — US stocks ended Thursday with a sharp decline in the biggest one-day loss since 2020 after US President Donald Trump announced his long-awaited reciprocal tariffs Wednesday after markets closed, Anadolu Ajansi (AA) reported.
A minimum baseline tariff of 10 per cent will be imposed on all countries except Canada and Mexico, with higher penalties charged on nations Trump deemed to be the “worst” trade offenders.
The president said his new economic effort seeks to “help build our economy” by spurring domestic manufacturing, raising government revenue and thwarting “cheating” on trade.
Reciprocal tariffs ranging from 10 per cent to 50 per cent were imposed on products the US imports from many of its trading partners.
The EU received 20 per cent, China 34 per cent, Vietnam 46 per cent, Taiwan (32), Japan (24), India (26), South Korea (25), Thailand (36), Switzerland (31), Indonesia (32), Malaysia (24), Cambodia (49), South Africa (30), Bangladesh (30), and Israel (17) in reciprocal tariffs.
Some countries, such as Türkiye, the UK, Brazil, Australia, the United Arab Emirates, New Zealand, Egypt and Saudi Arabia were subjected to 10 per cent baseline tariffs each.
Tech companies’ stock prices fell sharply, with Apple’s shares down more than 9 per cent due to supply chain disruption worries. More US tariffs were imposed on China, the country that supplies essential iPhone components, increasing the overall rate to 54 per cent.
Similar worries caused chip stocks to also plummet, with Nvidia down more than 7 per cent. The market capitalisation of the so-called “Magnificent Seven” stocks dropped more than US$900 billion, according to Anadolu.
The market sell-off was acknowledged by Trump, who compared the imposition of tariffs to “when a patient gets operated on.”
“The markets are going to boom. The stock is going to boom. The country is going to boom. And the rest of the world wants to see — is there any way they can make a deal,” he said Thursday.
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