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Wall Street's View on S&P 500 Profits Is Souring as Tariffs Loom BloombergWall Street begins to cut S&P 500 targets as tariff worries rock the stock market. Should investors be concerned? MarketWatchWatch this level for when the US stock sell-off could end Business InsiderAnalysts revisit S&P 500 forecasts amid recession worry TheStreet
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Trump signs funding bill to avoid shutdown The HillSunday shows preview: Congress avoids government shutdown; Trump tariffs rattle economy The Hill‘Deep sense of outrage and betrayal': House Democrats react to Schumer announcement NPRThe Senate votes t
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Trump signs GOP's 6-month government funding bill passed by Congress PBS NewsHourSunday shows preview: Congress avoids government shutdown; Trump tariffs rattle economy The Hill‘Deep sense of outrage and betrayal': House Democrats react to Schumer announcement NPRSenate passes six-month funding bill hours before shutdown deadline
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Tesla has joined the ranks of U.S. companies concerned that Trump's aggressive tariff policies may negatively affect global sales.
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Airline and retail executives are bracing for a slowdown in demand amid concerns tariffs will cut down consumer spending.
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A new survey from the University of Michigan shows Americans bracing for economic pain as tariffs and policy uncertainty bite.
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The gains on Friday were the biggest daily jump since President Trump's election. But they weren't enough to overcome steep tariff-induced losses earlier in the week, and the S&P 500 remained in negative territory.
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If tariffs continue, Americans can expect to pay an extra 20 cents per gallon of gas, an additional 50 cents for each avocado, and thousands more on new vehicles, almost immediately.
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The CEO of hedge fund Point72 turned bearish for the first time in a while due to punitive tariffs, immigration crackdown and federal spending cuts.
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