Wall Street plunged on Thursday on the final trading day of the week, with focus on US-Japan tariff talks, while a slump in UnitedHealth’s shares following a forecast cut by the insurer weighed on the Dow.
In morning trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 637 points, or 1.6%, to 39,032.
The S&P 500 fell 0.1%, and the Nasdaq was down 0.5%.
Ahead of the long weekend, all three major Wall Street indexes are on track for weekly losses, with the S&P 500 on pace to lose about 1.6% after its best week since November 2023.
After steep losses on Wednesday, investors found some optimism from President Trump’s comments on “big progress” in trade talks with Japan.
Focus will be on negotiation talks with dozens of countries over the coming weeks for more clarity on the size and scope of tariffs on individual nations and sectors.
Meanwhile, UnitedHealth plummeted 17% after lowering its annual profit forecast on expectations of high medical costs for the rest of the year.
Other health insurers slumped, with CVS Health down 6.1% and Humana falling 6.4%.
Healthcare shares led sectoral declines, but losses were limited by a 13% gain in Eli Lilly.
The drugmaker said its experimental pill, orforglipron, led to weight loss of nearly 8% and lowered blood sugar in type 2 diabetes patients.
The CBOE Volatility index was down from last week’s highs, but sharply above its 50-day moving average.
It was last down 1.22 points to 31.42.
Data showed weekly jobless claims came in lower-than-expected, suggesting the labor market remains stable.
“We don’t know how far Trump will let the market fall to achieve his endgame, until we have some clarity I would expect markets to continue to be very choppy,” Ross Bramwell, market strategist at Homrich Berg, said.
Indexes had extended losses on Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned Trump’s trade policies risked pushing inflation higher while weakening economic growth, adding policymakers needed more clarity before adjusting policy.
Trump hit back on Thursday, saying in a Truth Social post that Powell’s termination “cannot come fast enough” and calling for the central bank to cut interest rates.
Traders have scaled back bets of a May rate cut to 13.6%, according to CME’s FedWatch, and a Reuters poll showed economists see a higher probability of a US recession in the next 12 months.
Upbeat results from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) helped ease some gloom for the chip sector, after Nvidia flagged steep costs from new US export curbs.
TSMC’s US-listed shares gained 2.5%.