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Stock tumble even as inflation cools. Tesla and Apple slip, CarMax sinks

Catherine Baab

Thu, Apr 10, 2025, 7:10 AM 2 min read

 Michael M. Santiago (Getty Images)

Image: Michael M. Santiago (Getty Images)

Markets opened sharply lower Thursday, giving back a chunk of Wednesday’s rally.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 950 points, or about 2.3%, after its historic 3,000-point surge Wednesday, while the S&P 500 fell 2.9% and the Nasdaq dropped 3.5%, with major tech names leading the retreat: Apple (AAPL) stock slid almost 3%, Tesla (TSLA) dropped 5%, and Amazon (AMZN) fell more than 3%. Shopify (SHOP) stock tumbled 7%.

Used car stocks were hit especially hard after CarMax’s earnings miss, with CarMax stock down 15% and Carvana (CVNA) off 9%.

The pullback reflects lingering skepticism around President Donald Trump’s 90-day pause on sweeping tariffs, which arrived even more abruptly than the trade war policy itself. Markets seem reluctant to trust a policy pivot that arrived without warning — even as inflation data offered some welcome relief.

The Consumer Price Index showed that core inflation, which excludes food and energy, rose just 0.1% in March, the slowest monthly pace in nine months. Year-over-year, core prices climbed 2.8%, marking the tamest reading since mid-2021.

CarMax’s (KMX) fiscal fourth-quarter results, also released Thursday morning, revealed mixed performance amid a volatile market environment. The company reported net revenues of $6.0 billion, a 6.7% increase from the previous year. Earnings per diluted share rose to $0.58, up 81.3% from $0.32 a year ago. However, this fell short of analysts’ expectations of $0.66 per share.

Friday will bring a wave of first-quarter results from some of the biggest names in finance, giving investors a deeper look at how the bulge bracket and other banking behemoths are navigating 2025’s economic uncertainty.

JPMorgan Chase (JPM) will be closely watched for signals on loan growth, credit quality, and net interest margins — the critical metrics that show how it’s managing in a high-rate, low-visibility environment. Any signs of tightening credit or weakening consumer demand could ripple across the market.

Wells Fargo’s (WFC) numbers will offer a window into consumer lending, where even small shifts in behavior can signal broader household strain. With recession chatter back on the table, analysts are looking for clues about how the bank is adjusting its exposure.

Asset manager BlackRock (BLK) will report amid surging volatility and massive swings in investor sentiment. Its earnings should reveal whether clients are retreating into cash or leaning into risk — and where the big money is flowing.


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