Stocks slip amid Trump’s tariff threat, Bitcoin Spike Bui’s crypto stock

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3 Min Read

U.S. stocks slipped Friday, with Dow Jones Industrial Average down 250 points following President Donald Trump’s 35% tariff on Canada.

The July 11 trading was primarily a response to fresh trade war concerns as stocks hit an all-time high in recent weeks. The S&P 500 was reduced by -0.5%, while the Nasdaq composite fell by 0.3% as the Dow fell 250 points.

However, Bitcoin (BTC) strained the trend, rising about 5% in 24 hours to a new all-time high of over $118,000. Crypto Bellwether’s performance sparked bullish moves across the Altcoin market, with Ethereum (Eth) above the psychological $3,000 level.

Bitcoin’s Rally lifted crypto stocks with microStrategies (MSTR), Coinbase (coin), and Robinhood (hood) that are gaining from pre-market trading. After the US stock market was opened, MSTR rose 2% in early trading, while Coin and Hood were storing pre-market profits.

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Despite tariff concerns, stocks rose

Trump’s 35% tariffs on Canadian goods announced Thursday, scheduled to kick off in August, came just days after the US president’s latest threat.

“From August 1, 2025, Canada will charge a 35% tariff on Canadian products sent to the US, apart from all sectors’ tariffs,” Trump posted to The Truth Society.

This follows President Trump’s announcement of a 50% mandatory rate in Brazil at the beginning of the week.

Trump added to his fears with his statement that he is seeing another 15% to 20% blanket tariffs on many US trading partners, but the stock remains the highest ever.

“I think the tariffs were very well received. Today’s stock market has reached a new high,” Trump said in an interview with NBC News.

But overall investor optimism could dissipate whether a trade war is on fire or not. This is the scenario China recently warned as Trump threatened strict tariffs on members of the Emerging Markets Economics Bloc called BRICS.

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Although Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa are founding members, the group expanded to include Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates.

You might like it too: Bitcoin defeats Ass again, Dow Jones scores 200 points when Trump threatens new tariffs

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