The US-China trade war has delivered Wall Street a five-week losing streak.
The Dow declined 0.6% this week, marking its fifth straight weekly decline. That’s the longest slump since June 2011. (Fun fact: The Dow's 178.31- point dip this week was oddly similar to last week's 178.37- point loss).
The broader markets suffered deeper losses, with the Nasdaq tumbling 2.3% and the S&P 500 sliding 1.1%.
Trade concerns eased a bit on Friday, lifting the Dow 95 points, or 0.4%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq inched up 0.1% apiece.
US oil prices rose 1.2% to $58.63 a barrel, marking a slight rebound from their worst day since Christmas Eve. Still, oil fell nearly 7% for the week, its worst in five months.
Foot Locker (FL) plunged 16% after it posted results that missed estimates. Tesla (TSLA) dropped another 2.5%, finishing at its lowest point since December 2016.