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US stocks rally but Dow posts worst week since 2023

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US stocks rallied Friday but the Dow still posted its worst week since March 2023. - Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
US stocks rallied Friday but the Dow still posted its worst week since March 2023. - Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

What a week it’s been.

US stocks surged Friday but all three major indexes still closed the week in the red. President Donald Trump’s budding trade war has sent jitters through markets that caused a volatile week on Wall Street.

The Dow ended the day higher by 675 points, or 1.65%. The broader S&P 500 rose 2.13% and the Nasdaq Composite gained 2.61%.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq rallied Friday to notch their best single-day gains since the US presidential election. Yet it wasn’t enough to drag the indexes out of the red for this week. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq posted their fourth consecutive week in the red, which is their worst losing streak in seven months.

Despite the Friday rally, the blue-chip Dow closed down roughly 3.1% this week and posted its worst week since March 2023.

Friday’s rebound in stocks came after a steep decline on Thursday that saw the S&P 500 close in correction territory, down more than 10% from its recent high, for the first time since late 2023.

The benchmark index shed roughly $5.28 trillion in market value from its peak on February 19 to market close on March 13, according to FactSet data.

US stocks rallied on the news that lawmakers would likely pass a government funding plan Friday, avoiding a shutdown. Markets hate uncertainty, and hopes of dodging a shutdown provided a boost for stocks at the end of a turbulent week.

Trump’s tariffs have roiled markets this month, and recent drawdowns can also present opportunities for rebounds.

“The markets are grappling with the notion of where fair value rests for a stock market that faces headwinds from tariffs, fiscal spending cuts and potentially softening economic data,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment officer at BMO Wealth Management, in an email.

Ma said he expects a “multi-day relief rally could be coming soon” due to how much negative investor sentiment has built up recently. “Extreme fear” has been the sentiment driving markets since the end of February, according to CNN’s Fear and Greed Index.

All three major indexes opened higher Friday and held on to their gains despite a fresh read on consumer sentiment that showed Americans are souring on the economy.

Consumer sentiment fell 11% this month to a reading of 57.9, a preliminary reading showed, down from last month’s reading of 64.7 and reaching its lowest level since November 2022, according to the latest consumer sentiment survey from the University of Michigan.

Stocks driving markets higher on Friday included tech and AI stars like Nvidia (NVDA) and Palantir (PLTR) that rebounded after a slide in the past month.