Retail and apparel stocks spiked Friday morning after the Supreme Court struck down President Trump’s sweeping tariffs.
Shares of Victoria’s Secret jumped 5%, while Lululemon and Dick’s Sporting Goods advanced about 2%. Dollar Tree and Abercrombie & Fitch saw smaller spikes.
Overall, the Dow closed up more than 200 points, or 0.5%. The Nasdaq gained 0.9% on Friday and snapped a five-week losing streak.
The National Retail Federation welcomed the Supreme Court’s blockbuster decision stating Congress, not the president, has the power to impose tariffs.
Retail and apparel stocks jumped Friday after the Supreme Court’s vote to strike President Trump’s tariffs. APThe decision “provides much-needed certainty for US businesses and manufacturers,” David French, an executive for the trade group, told the New York Times.
He also voiced hope that businesses will see refunds.
Refunds “will serve as an economic boost and allow companies to reinvest in their operations, their employees and their customers,” he said.
American consumers are likely never to see refunds themselves, though.
In a 6-3 vote, the highest court in the land found that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which Trump used to apply broad, across-the-board levies — including a 10% baseline rate and additional tariffs on America’s biggest trading partners over the shipping of fentanyl to the US — does not authorize the imposition of duties.
Here’s the latest on President Trump’s tariffs following Supreme Court ruling:
- Trump’s trade czar reveals why Supreme Court is likely to back WH in next big tariff challenge in ‘Pod Force One’ interview
- Trump weighs new batch of national security tariffs after Supreme Court ruling: report
- FedEx sues US government for ‘full refund’ of Trump tariffs after Supreme Court ruling
- Dow plummets over 800 points amid uncertainty over Trump’s tariff plans
- Senate Dems move to force Trump admin to pay back $175B in tariff refunds with new bill
In a 6-3 vote, the Supreme Court struck down the president’s sweeping tariffs. APUS businesses and consumers paid about 90% of the cost of the president’s weeping tariffs last year — contradicting the president’s repeated claims that foreign countries were footing the bill — according to a study from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York late last week.
Top White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett rejected that study.






