- Dow Jones tested on Friday after Donald Trump re -focused on China.
- Stock markets remain hesitant after a legal meeting of this week for Trump’s tariffs.
- American PCE inflation came as expected, albeit with revisions of previous data.
The industrial average Dow Jones (DJIA) crashed on Friday when investors continued to go to the White House with new trade concerns. The President of the United States (USA) Donald Trump turned again to focus on China and claimed that their preliminary trade arrangements were “violated”. Despite the general cooling of key US data on expenditure on expenses (PCE) in the US in April, the previous data recorded upside down and the impact on prices is still appearing.
Trump renews the rhetoric of a trade war focused directly on China
President Trump’s approach to business policy continues to drive wedge to markets and divides investors in the middle. Through a contribution on the social media, Donald Trump said that China had “violated” the preliminary trade agreements that both commercial giants had agreed in recent weeks. According to The Wall Street Journal, the latest Ire Trump comes when China slowly approves the export of rare soil exports to the US. This further shattered the nerves of investors, which are already shot after the federal judges decided this week that the Trump administration had violated its boundaries using the National Security Acts to adopt large tariffs.
Trump’s tariffs can remain in place while the appeal process begins. Unfortunately, this pushes the market for the clarity of American trade, because the White House is trying to overturn the decision. Trump employees said they would also look for other legal ways to pursue their business agenda, probably to continue to completely circumvent the congress.
According to sources within the administration of Trump’s administration, it prepares orders to impose new restrictions to restrict the Chinese approach to the American technology industry. It is unlikely that the AI ​​tech and the monolites that have benefited from it and the monolites of chip production are unlikely that President Trump will be favorable to try to lock them from one of the largest hungry markets in the world.
Ai-head-out technical rally ready to face headwriting-off-sessions
During this week of nVidia earnings (NVDA) NVIDIA CFO CEST CRESS noted that the technical giant expects to disappear approximately 8b in the hands of already existing technological restrictions established by Trump administration. Nvidia also expects to remain completely locked from the Chinese AI accelerators market, which is expected to increase to 50b in the coming years. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang suggested that Trump’s approach to technology trade in China is based on the wrong assumption that China is unable to produce chips and AI processors:
The question is not whether China will have AI, yes. The question is whether one of the largest AI markets in the world will run on American platforms. The US has established its policy on the assumption that China cannot produce AI chips. This assumption … it’s obviously wrong.
Read more news: Tech Stocks Skid as Trump’s deterioration with China leads to Friday’s turn
US PCE inflation corresponded to the median market forecast in April with an annual PCE Price index Inflation clock at 2.5% year -on -year. However, March’s PCE print was higher to 2.7%, limiting any investor celebration, as inflation data is still paid stubbornly above the target scope of the federal reserve system (Fed) 2%.
Dow Jones Price Progncast
The industrial average Dow Jones was still stuck in a mud near 42,000 handle, as the main capital index threatens to slip into the consolidation period. The price event remains reinforced just above 200 days exponential gliding average (EMA) near 41 590, but the potential is pushed from intraday graphs. Dow Jones slipped into a negative area for 2025 and remains about 6.5% of the record maximum at the end of last year.
Dow Jones graph
Dow Jones Faqs
The Dow Jones industrial average, one of the oldest stock market indices in the world, is composed of the 30 most traded shares in the US. The index is more essential to the price than weighted capitalization. It is calculated with a summary of the prices of components inventory and their distribution factor, currently 0.152. The index was founded by Charles Dow, who also founded Wall Street Journal. In later years, she was criticized for not being sufficiently representative because he was watching only 30 conglomerates, unlike wider indices, such as the S&P 500.
Many different factors are controlled by the industrial average Dow Jones (DJIA). The main performance is the performance of component companies revealed in quarterly reports on the company’s earnings. American and global macroeconomic data also contribute, as this has an impact on investors’ sentiment. The level of interest rates set by the federal reserve (Fed) also affects DJIA because it affects the cost of loan, on which many corporations are strongly dependent. Inflation may therefore be the main driver and other metrics that affect the Fed’s decision.
Dow Theory is a method for identifying the primary trend of the stock market developed by Charles Dow. The key step is to compare the direction of the industrial diameter of the Dow Jones (DJIA) and the Dow Jones (DJTA) transport diameter, followed by trends where both move in the same direction. The volume is confirming the criteria. Theory uses elements of the analysis of the peak and trough. Dow’s theory represents three phases of trends: accumulation when smart money begins to buy or sell; public participation when the wider public joins; and distribution when they leave smart money.
There are a number of ways to trade DJIA. One of them is to use ETFs that allow investors to trade DJIA as the only security rather than have to buy shares in all 30 constitutional companies. The leading example is the industrial average SPDR Jones (DIA). Futures DJIA contracts enable traders to speculate about the future index value and provide the right, but not an obligation, buy or sell an index for a predetermined price in the future. Mutual funds allow investors to buy a share in the diversified portfolio of DJIA shares, which provides exposure to the overall index.
