Trade Turmoil and Tech Shifts: Navigating Market Volatility
U.S. stock futures pointed to a lower open as new tariffs and Amazon's unimpressive earnings report created negative sentiment. A disappointing labor market report intensified fears, raising expectations for a Fed rate cut. Apple's forecast beat estimates but warned of tariff-related costs.

Futures suggested a rough opening for U.S. markets on Friday, driven by new tariffs and Amazon's less-than-stellar earnings results. This coincided with a weaker-than-anticipated labor report showing a mere 73,000 jobs added in July, raising market anxieties about economic stability in light of trade issues.
President Trump imposed tariffs between 10% and 41% on imports from multiple nations, exacerbating market fears hours before the deadline. The market's apprehension led to increased expectations, from 41.2% to 62.9%, for a Federal Reserve rate cut in September, according to CME's FedWatch tool.
Meanwhile, Amazon's shares tumbled 8.3% due to lackluster cloud growth, while Apple delivered better-than-expected forecasts but cautioned about $1.1 billion in anticipated tariff expenses. Stock markets were further roiled by declines in AI optimism as Microsoft and Meta's prior earnings highs saw a retreat.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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