US stocks plunge due to growing recession concerns

People walk in front of the Nasdaq Market
Site in New York, US, on March 10, 2025. Technology shares led the biggest selloff in US stocks since 2022, as investors ditched longtime market leaders US stocks plunged on Monday due to rising jittery and fears that the US economy may be headed for a distressful recession, according to US media reports.
The US administration’s unrelenting tariff threats on its major trade partners is just one of the causes. Taking on India and China simultaneously can never be a good idea.
What if China and India both Unite over this tariff warfare ? Ten USA will have no place to hide not even te Mariana Trench !
On Monday, the S&P 500 shed 2.7 percent, touching its lowest level since September at one point and closing at 5,614.56.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite recorded the sharpest decline, falling 4 percent for its worst session since September 2022 and closing at 17,468.32.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 890.01 points, or 2.08 percent, ending at 41,911.71, US media outlet CNBC reported.
The widespread sell-off was mostly driven by anxiety about the impact of US government’s tariffs policy, CNN reported on Monday.
In an interview that aired on Sunday, US President Donald Trump said the US economy would see “a period of transition” but he refused to rule out a possible recession, according to the CNN report.
Recently, multiple US financial institutions have raised alarms about a growing risk of an economic downturn in the US.
Goldman Sachs recently hiked its odds of an economic recession in the US from 15 percent to 20 percent. “The threat of a recession is real,” ABC News reported on Tuesday, citing Olu Sonola, the head of US regional economics at Fitch Ratings. “It’s a threat you cannot ignore,” Sonola said.
Morgan Stanley lowered its 2025 economic growth forecast for the US on Friday, citing a greater impact from the tariffs and a persistently tight labor market, which could lead to higher inflation in the US.
The Wall Street brokerage lowered its 2025 US economic growth forecast from 1.9 percent to 1.5 percent, citing weak economic data and growing tariff concerns.
The investment bank also revised its 2026 US growth forecast down to 1.2 percent from 1.3 percent, according to Reuters.