U.S. tariffs are sending shockwaves through global markets, with stocks plummeting and traders flocking to safe havens. The S&P 500 lost over $2 trillion in value, as worries mount about the tariffs choking economic growth. The dollar weakened, raising questions about its status as a safe investment, while global bonds surged. Some sectors, like consumer staples, found footing, but major indices struggled. Trump’s tariffs may boost domestic production, but experts warn of rising prices and recession fears.
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insights INSIGHT
Stock Market Meltdown
The stock market experienced a significant downturn, with the S&P 500 dropping almost 5%, its worst day since June 2020.
Several indices, including the Dow Jones, Nasdaq, and Russell 2000, also saw substantial losses.
insights INSIGHT
Gainers Amidst the Decline
Despite the widespread market decline, some stocks, primarily in consumer staples, saw gains.
Coca-Cola, Philip Morris, and Lamb Weston Holdings were among the gainers.
question_answer ANECDOTE
Intel's Potential Joint Venture
Intel stock rose by almost 9% at its peak due to news of a potential chip-making joint venture with TSMC.
This venture was reportedly initiated at the request of the Trump administration.
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The “America First” trade is unraveling in the sweeping turmoil in global markets, with stocks acutely exposed to the US economy sinking alongside the dollar. As Wall Street’s rebellion against Donald Trump’s tariff war intensifies, traders are rushing into fixed-income havens.
About $2 trillion was erased from the S&P 500, with the gauge down about 5%. The Russell 2000 of smaller firms extended its plunge from a 2021 all-time high to 20% on speculation the president’s trade offensive will stunt the American economy. The greenback slid 1.5%, reigniting the debate about its haven reputation during challenging times as the euro, yen and Swiss franc surged. Oil joined a selloff in commodities.
All in, the much-vaunted America-first trade — buying up assets that win when the US outperforms the rest of the world — is reversing on concern that the steepest increase in American tariffs in a century will hammer economic growth.
That’s driving a fierce rally in global bonds, sending the yield on benchmark Treasuries briefly below the closely-watched 4% level. Most other yields also tumbled as money markets priced in a 50% chance of the Federal Reserve delivering four quarter-point rate reductions this year.
Trump has embraced tariffs as a tool to assert US power, revive manufacturing at home and extract geopolitical concessions. Economists say the near-term result of his measures will likely be higher US prices and slower growth, or perhaps even a recession.
Listen for comprehensive coverage of the U.S. market close on Bloomberg Television, Bloomberg Radio, and YouTube with Romaine Bostick, Alix Steel, Carol Massar and Tim Stenovec.