Stocks finished the week in a dramatic fashion ⁠— it was the worst of the year for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite ⁠— after President Donald Trump announced new tariffs on Chinese imports Thursday.

Starting September 1, $300 billion worth of goods from China, including toys and iPhones , will be hit with a 10% tariff. That's on top of the existing 25% tariff on $250 billion worth of imports.

US stocks and global markets are flashing red in response.

Theclosed nearly 100 points, or 0.4% lower. At its worst it was down more than 300 points on Friday. It was its worst week since May. Theand theclosed down 0.7% and 1.3%, respectively. It was the worst week of the year for the two benchmarks, according to Refinitiv.

Elsewhere in the market, the yield on 10-year Treasuries dropped to its lowest since November 2016. It last sat at 1.8469%.

The July jobs report did little to change the narrative. The US economy added 164,000 jobs in July, in line with the Refinitiv consensus estimate. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.7%.

More drama on the trade front adds to the odds that the Federal Reserve will make a deeper interest rate cut in September, according to Goldman Sachs economists led by Jan Hatzius. That said, with one month left until the new tariffs are implemented and on-going talks with Beijing, there is a chance they will never actually come into effect.

The Goldman economists anticipate the new tariffs will shave up to 0.2 percentage points off of US GDP growth. That will rise to a 0.5- to 0.6-percentage point cut if the tariffs rise to 25%, they said.

The risk of US tariffs on European auto imports has risen with Thursday's tariff announcement, they said.

It has been a volatile week for stocks.

On Wednesday, the Fed cut rates by a quarter percentage point , as widely anticipated. But comments from Fed Chairman Jerome Powell that the cut wasn't ushering in an extended period of loser monetary policy disappointed markets. Stocks sold off.

On Thursday, equities recovered and the weakest ISM manufacturing survey in three years added to the narrative that the US economy will need another boost after this week's rate cut.