The stock fell as much as 20%, dragging industry peers Humana and CVS lower as well.
"I've never seen a recession last three years," J.B. Hunt CEO Shelley Simpson said.
The 30-year fixed mortgage rate snapped six straight weekly declines amid Trump tariffs.
The ruble has appreciated 38% against the US dollar, the most of any currency.
The stock fell as much as 3% as Bloomberg reported China halted all purchases of US aircraft.
"I'm looking at something to help car companies with it," President Donald Trump told reporters.
A surprise tariff exemption on key tech products is helping spur an Apple rally.
"It is no longer hyperbole to say that the dollar's reserve status and broader dominant role is at least somewhat in question," Capital Economics said.
"It seems that we go from panic to euphoria to terror," one analyst told Business Insider. Stocks and bonds swung violently, while the dollar plunged.
"This reduces the flexibility of the US administration in pursuing expansionary fiscal policy to support growth," Deutsche Bank wrote on Friday.
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2025-04-11T12:18:59Z
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"We must reset our trade relationships with the rest of the world, we also must narrow our fiscal deficit," Bass said on Thursday.
"The willingness of Retail investors to place confidence on market upside despite radical policy uncertainty has clearly paid off," JPMorgan said.
The memes were flowing as stocks saw their biggest gain in years after Trump hit paused on the trade war for 90 days.
"Historical comparisons show that recessions are usually associated with larger equity drawdowns than we have seen," Goldman Sachs said.
The 30-year fixed rate hit 6.61% as US tariffs pushed bond yields lower through April 4th.
One truckmaker expects the trucking market to shrink 10% by the end of 2025. The US freight industry has struggled since the pandemic.
Firms that deal with housing products are facing a major EPS hit from the trade war, Bank of America wrote Tuesday.
"The reason why cooler heads will prevail is that, again, in a trade war, everybody will suffer; the US will suffer the least," Eisman said.
The US economy could be stuck in a tug-of-war that offers no good solutions for the Fed, as low growth and rising prices result in an era of stagflation.