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Major US indexes dropped Wednesday amid negative GDP, inflation, and labor readings.
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The data suggests the US economy is struggling amid policy shifts from the Trump administration.
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“The economy is losing momentum and risks to the economic outlook are increasing,” an analyst wrote.
A trio of bad data points Wednesday snapped a streak of market gains, dragging US indexes lower as fears of a recession ramped up.
Investors first digested disappointing GDP data showing the economy contracted last quarter amid seismic shifts in US trade policy. The Dow Jones fell by as much as 700 points after the opening bell, with sharp drawdowns in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq composite.
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President Donald Trump was quick to shift blame after the data dropped Wednesday morning, pointing to former President Joe Biden as the reason for the economic weakness.
“Our Country will boom, but we have to get rid of the Biden ‘Overhang.’ This will take a while, has NOTHING TO DO WITH TARIFFS, only that he left us with bad numbers, but when the boom begins, it will be like no other. BE PATIENT!!!” he said on Truth Social.
Stock indexes pared their deep losses by late Wednesday morning.
Here’s where major US indexes stood at about 3:30 p.m. ET:
The economy contracted in the first three months of 2025.
The data marks the first contraction since 2022 and is a far cry from the prior quarter’s 2.4% growth rate. The decrease largely reflects a surge in imports — a component of GDP calculations — as consumers and businesses rushed to get ahead of Trump’s sweeping tariff policy.
“This artificial front-loading of demand sets the stage for a sharper demand cliff in Q2 — a far more troubling phase of the ongoing economic slowdown,” Gregory Daco, EY’s chief economist, said.
For investors, it suggests a step closer toward recession, a scenario increasingly priced in by Wall Street. But commentators acknowledged that the report was particularly noisy and reflected an economy before Trump’s biggest tariffs took effect in April.
“The fall in real activity and acceleration in prices from today’s GDP report hints at potential stagflation but is still more modest in outcome than dire projections,” Michael Reynolds, Glenmede’s vice president of investment strategy, said. “Tariff-driven inflation and impacts on business/consumer spending will likely add to this concern in the coming months.”