Wall Street continued a retreat in the 'Extreme Fear' territory after the Trump government had taken over the characteristic trade policy.
The S&P Global, Dow Jones and Nasdaq all act in the middle of the day 6 March in the red.
The Nasdaq lost more than 2 percent by noon in New York.
The sale sent CNN's fear of greed index, an indicator that measures seven different factors on the stock market to determine which sentiment the investors drives, in 'extreme fear' territory.
The sale of 6 March continues with Volatile Week for investors, because all three indexes saw large fluctuations.
Firstly, markets arrived on Tuesday after the President announced rates for Mexico, Canada and China and the countries of revenge.
Wall Street received some momentum on Wednesday after President Trump had removed the rates for car manufacturers until 2 April.
But then Trump announced that it withdrew the most rates for Mexican import to a social media post on March 6.

Stock traders act in 'extreme fear' territory
“After I had spoken with President Claudia Sheinbaum from Mexico, I agree that Mexico will not be obliged to pay rates about something that falls under the USMCA agreement,” said President Trump on his social media app, Truth Social.
The USMCA is a free trade agreement that is affected during the first Trump administration between the US, Mexico and Canada.
Trump said that the Mexican rates are also postponed until 2 April.
The rapid changes have thrown investors off-cooker.
“You just have confusion,” Keith Lerner, the main market strategist at Truist, told CNBC.
“That confusion penetrates the daily fluctuations of the market.”
Technical shares are most difficult.
Nvidia, a dominant microchip producer who is seen as a Bellwether of the AI ​​industry, lost 5 percent of his share value by noon.

Wall Street saw huge drops while technical shares stumbled in the midst of uncertainty

Experts pointed to uncertainty about President Trump's rate policy as a contribution to the steep fall
The losses remain a trend for Nvidia, which since the beginning of 2025 has lost more than 13 percent of its value and more than 19 percent.
Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Tesla and Intel also act in red.
Multiple technology companies, including Apple and Nvidia, assemble and produce products outside the US, making them susceptible to prices of volatility if Trump retains rates.
This is not the first time that Trump has investigated his rate decisions after the markets had responded poorly.
Stocks also cherish signs that American consumers withdraw the expenses after years of blown up costs.
Various large retailers and Walmart, Target and Best Buy-Hebben all predicted that less than Rosy Growth Outlooks in 2025.
Walmart's prediction of selling slumps had the biggest impact of the couple. The retailer, based in Arkansas, said it expected growth from 3 to 4 percent in 2025.
Last year the company grew by more than 9 percent.