Home Tech Economic Angst Hits Wall Street as Stocks Plunge: Markets Wrap

Economic Angst Hits Wall Street as Stocks Plunge: Markets Wrap

by
0 comment

(Bloomberg) — Economic angst enveloped every corner of Wall Street as US-China trade tensions escalate, sparking a plunge in stocks, the dollar and oil, with liquidations in US assets pointing to disorder in the financial system.

A day after the biggest stock-buying wave in years, assets tied to the economic cycle are sinking again. Traders are rushing to game out how the effective freezing of Chinese trade will impact corporate earnings, growth and new hiring. The S&P 500 sank about 4.5%, while the greenback fell toward the lowest since October. After a brief respite following a solid $22 billion bond sale, long-dated Treasuries turned volatile again.

Market euphoria flipped back to unease on concern an escalation of the trade war between the world’s two biggest economies will bring lasting damage to global growth. US tariffs on imports from China now total 145% after the latest hike, according to a White House official.

Subscribe to the Stock Movers Podcast on Apple, Spotify and other Podcast Platforms.

“Investors are sobering up and realizing that the US-China ‘food fight’ will probably get worse before it gets better,” said Michael Bailey at FBB Capital Partners. “We’re waking up to the fact that a 10% base tariff will sting, 90 days could fly by and then the pain of higher tariffs could return, and China is fighting back hard.”

Just a day after financial markets cheered Trump’s decision to delay some of his tariff plans, the selloff in riskier corners of the market suggests growing skepticism that trade talks will be wrapped up in a timely manner, despite White House National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett saying the US is “well advanced” in its discussions with economic partners.

The first signs of a slowdown in global trade are already emerging as companies around the world hit their own pause button on orders and he continues to escalate his trade war with China. If anything, Trump is extending the uncertainty that has already begun to drag on business and consumer sentiment.

“We still believe the anxiety around tariffs are alive and well. Volatility works in both directions — down and up. The path forward likely includes more market swings as we do not have a conclusion. In fact, we have the opposite, a likely extension of the tariff negotiation process,” said Nathan Thooft at Manulife Investment Management.

Trump’s pledge to pause tariffs on some trading partners on Wednesday had ignited the biggest wave of buying Wall Street has seen since 2008. After narrowly avoiding a bear market, the S&P 500 staged a historic bounce from a selloff that wiped out trillions from global share prices amid the specter of a full-blown trade war that fueled fears of a US recession.

source

You may also like

Copyright @2024 – Meta Money, All Right Reserved.