Headline Roundup • April 3rd, 2025
Stock Market Experiences Biggest One-Day Drop Since 2020 After Trump Announces New Tariffs
Summary from the AllSides News Team
The US stock market closed Thursday with the biggest one-day drop since 2020, sparking concern about an oncoming recession.
The Details: S&P 500 companies lost $2.4 trillion in stock value, a 4.8% drop overall, after President Donald Trump announced new tariffs, which are the steepest the US has levied in over 100 years. Some economists and investors have expressed concern that the tariffs and this market drop suggest higher chances of a recession than previously predicted.
What Industries Were Affected: Airlines, clothing, retailers, restaurants, banks, and technology companies saw the biggest losses. United Airlines stock, for example, dropped 15.6% Thursday, and Amazon and Apple stock both dropped 9%. Automakers, on the other hand, were not hit as hard, with General Motors down only 4.3% and Ford only 6%.
How the Media Covered It: Outlets from the left and center highlighted concerns over a potential recession. An Associated Press (Left bias) headline read, “Fear that Trump tariffs will spark recession wipes out more than $2 trillion in value from US stocks,” and it quoted an economic researcher saying “many countries will likely end up in a recession” as a result of the tariffs. Reuters (Center) cited investors “bracing for the increasing chance” of recession, but it also included a quote from Trump saying, “I think it’s going very well.” Newsmax (Right) focused on the Trump administration’s confidence in the long-term benefits of the tariffs, with a headline stating J.D. Vance is “'Feeling Good' About Tariffs Despite Bad Day.”
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Featured Coverage of this Story
Global investors grappled on Thursday with rising chances of an economic downturn and a sprawling trade war, as they scrambled for safe-haven assets to buffer against fallout from U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs.
Markets were stunned late on Wednesday when Trump announced Washington's steepest trade barriers in more than 100 years. The move slammed stock markets and the dollar as investors sought safety in assets like bonds and the Japanese yen.
Vice President J.D. Vance touted the implementation of tariffs despite Thursday's massive stock market sell-off, telling Newsmax the Trump administration is "feeling good" while also reassuring one midwestern GOP senator that American farmers are going to be among those who "reap the rewards" in the end.
Vance joined "Rob Schmitt Tonight" to react to the Dow Jones tumbling 1,679 points on Thursday in reaction to President Donald Trump's tariffs. Vance asserted that "one bad day" in the stock market is going to render a "booming market for a long time."

AP Photo/Seth Wenig
U.S. companies had trillions of dollars in value wiped out Thursday after President Donald Trump slapped sweeping tariffs on foreign imports.
Virtually every sector suffered big losses as U.S. financial markets closed with their biggest one-day drop since COVID-19 flattened the global economy five years ago.
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