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Stocks fell on Monday, the first trading day of the month, as a decline in Amazon shares put pressure on the broader tech sector.
The Dow Jones industrial average traded 116 points lower, with a decline in Walmart offsetting strong gains in UnitedHealth. The S&P 500 pulled back 1 percent, with tech falling more than 1 percent. The Nasdaq composite dropped 1.4 percent as Amazon dropped 3.7 percent.
The e-commerce giant's stock after President Donald Trump tweeted on Saturday that Amazon was scamming the U.S. Postal Service, adding the service loses "billions of dollars" delivering packages for the e-commerce giant.
Amazon has been one of the best-performing stocks over the past year, rising nearly 64 percent in that time period.
Trump tweeted again about Amazon on Monday, saying: "Only fools, or worse, are saying that our money losing Post Office makes money with Amazon. THEY LOSE A FORTUNE, and this will be changed."
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Tech shares continued to be under pressure on Monday, with shares of Facebook, Netflix and Alphabet all trading lower. Last month, concerns over how Facebook handles data collected from its users sent the entire sector lower. Facebook dropped 10.4 percent in March.
Snap's stock also fell 7.3 percent Monday after MoffettNathanson reiterated its sell rating, noting it found students were "uniformly disapproving" of the company's app redesign.
Traders also fretted over concerns that a trade war may be brewing.
China announced overnight Monday it had implemented tariffs on 128 types of U.S. imports . The goods hit with the charges the list of products proposed by Beijing in March and comes as a direct response to President Donald Trump signing off on tariffs on imported steel and aluminum last month. China said in March that those goods had an import value of $3 billion in 2017.
Trade worries also remained after Trump linked his proposal to build a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico to ongoing NAFTA negotiations between the two countries. In a tweet Sunday, Trump said: "They must stop the big drug and people flows, or I will stop their cash cow, NAFTA. NEED WALL!"
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"The new bearish narrative is that tariffs implemented by the Trump administration will spur a global trade war that would spiral the world into a recession," said Nick Raich, CEO of The Earnings Scout. "We understand the fear. We get how bad a global trade war would be on future profits."
However, "despite fears of a global trade war, guidance among the early reporting companies are taking earnings growth expectations higher," said Raich, noting companies are getting a substantial boost from lower corporate taxes.