Wall Street ends mixed; GM slumps as tariffs bite

NST Wed, Jul 23, 2025 08:36am - 2 days View Original


Wall Street shares ended mixed on Tuesday, with steep losses in General Motors and a gain in Tesla as investors focused on recent and upcoming quarterly reports and watched for signs of progress in US trade discussions.

Wall Street shares ended mixed on Tuesday, with steep losses in General Motors and a gain in Tesla as investors focused on recent and upcoming quarterly reports and watched for signs of progress in US trade discussions.

GM tumbled after the automaker reported a $1 billion hit from tariffs to its quarterly results, adding more fuel to investor concerns about US President Donald Trump's global trade policy. Shares of Ford Motor also fell. Tesla climbed a day before its quarterly report, while Alphabet, also reporting on Wednesday, also rose.

Optimism about heavy spending on artificial intelligence has underpinned a rally in Wall Street's most valuable companies, with the S&P 500 trading around record highs.

"The market is consolidating recent gains and is in a bit of a holding pattern with some huge catalysts over the next week or two, including the August 1 tariff deadline and a lot of important Magnificent Seven earnings," said Ross Mayfield, an investment strategy analyst at Baird.

Other Big Tech stocks lost ground, with Meta Platforms and Microsoft both closing lower. Shares of RTX dropped after the aerospace and defense giant took a hit from Trump's trade war despite strong demand for its engines and aftermarket services. Lockheed Martin tumbled after its quarterly profit plunged by about 80 per cent.

US trade policy remains a major point of uncertainty for investors and companies as Trump's self-imposed August 1 deadline for many countries to reach agreements with the White House approaches. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he would meet his Chinese counterpart next week to discuss an extension to the August 12 deadline set for tariffs on imports from China. Other trade negotiations appeared stalled, with optimism for a breakthrough deal with India waning and EU officials weighing countermeasures against the United States.

According to preliminary data, the S&P 500 gained 4.30 points, or 0.07 per cent, to end at 6,309.90 points, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 81.24 points, or 0.39 per cent, to 20,892.93. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 175.77 points, or 0.40 per cent, to 44,498.84. Philip Morris slumped after reporting second-quarter revenue below expectations, as shipments of its ZYN nicotine pouches disappointed investors.

Analysts on average expected S&P 500 companies to report a 7 per cent increase in earnings for the second quarter, with technology heavyweights driving much of that gain, according to LSEG I/B/E/S.

After last week's mixed economic data, traders have all but ruled out an interest-rate cut from the US Federal Reserve at next week's policy meeting. They now see about a 60 per cent chance of a reduction in September, according to the CME's FedWatch tool.

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