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- Stock markets rose for the fourth consecutive day as tech companies saw gains and investors interpreted President Donald Trump’s Friday comments on tariff negotiations.
Stock markets rose slightly Friday on the back of gains in tech stocks like Alphabet and Nvidia as well as conflicting messages from President Donald Trump on tariffs. The S&P 500 was up 0.75%, the Dow Jones was flat, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq jumped 1.25%.
Alphabet, the parent company of the search giant Google, beat analysts’ predictions for its first quarter and grew its topline year-over-year in Q1 by 12% to $90.2 billion. From market close Thursday to Friday afternoon, its stock rose 1.5%. AI chip manufacturer Nvidia saw an even bigger jump of 4.3% after an executive said Thursday that the tech giant hasn’t seen a pullback in demand for its chips.
Meanwhile, in a wide-ranging interview with Time published on Friday, Trump promised potential relief to investors when he said he’s made “200 deals” on tariffs. He declined to say which countries and promised that initial negotiations would end in three to four weeks.
Conversely, in what could be a bearish signal for global markets, he stated that he would consider it “total victory” if tariffs on foreign imports were anywhere between 20% and 50% in one year.
The small Friday surge in the stock market follows three days of positive jumps as markets look to regain their losses after Trump’s “Liberation Day.” On April 2, the president unveiled a base 10% tax on all countries’ exports and targeted China through a crescendo of tariffs, which culminated in a 145% tax on Chinese exports. Trump’s tariff plan prompted markets to tank amid investor fears of an all-out trade war.
Xi Jinping, the president of China, retaliated against the U.S. with reciprocal tariffs, and Trump has since broadcast that taxes against the People’s Republic will “come down substantially.” In his interview with Time, Trump said that he’s been in touch with Jinping. Chinese officials, however, have repeatedly denied that they’ve been in negotiations with the Trump administration and have recently exempted some U.S. imports from its own retaliatory tariffs.
Markets have also closely tracked Trump’s comments on the Federal Reserve, the U.S. central bank. The president has repeatedly criticized Jerome Powell, the Chair of the Fed, for not cutting interest rates quickly enough. Trump’s criticisms reached a boiling point when he suggested last week that he had considered firing Powell, undercutting the Fed’s longstanding independence from the executive branch. The 47th president has since walked back his rhetoric and said he had “no intention” of firing the Fed chair.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
https://fortune.com/img-assets/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/GettyImages-2211013874-e1745610300684.jpg?resize=1200,600 https://fortune.com/article/stock-market-sp-500-nasdaq-dow-jones-alphabet-nvidia-donald-trump/Ben Weiss