The market that embraced Trump for most of his first term and in the lead-up to his second has turned on the president. The S&P 500 closed in correction territory on Thursday, falling 10 per cent from the all-time high it set just three weeks ago.
The Dow is approaching correction too. The tech-heavy Nasdaq fell into a correction more than a week ago.
And the Russell 2000, made up of smaller businesses, which are typically more exposed to shifting economic winds, has fallen a stunning 18.4 per cent from a high hit just after the election, which was within a whisker of its all-time record.
Even as stocks posed a modest comeback Friday — the Dow rose 200 points, or 0.5 per cent, at the open, the S&P 500 was 0.9 per cent higher and the Nasdaq was up 1.4 per cent — sentiment on Wall Street has been overwhelmingly negative. CNN’s Fear and Greed Index has plunged into “Extreme Fear.”
“The stock market is losing its confidence in the Trump 2.0 policies,” said Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research.
Instead, investors have poured money into traditional safe havens like government bonds and gold. Treasury yields, which trade in the opposite direction to prices, have tumbled over the past month. And spot gold prices on Friday hit $3,000 a troy ounce for the first time in history.
Traders have grown increasingly concerned that Trump’s policies could inflict serious damage on the economy.
Despite Trump’s insistence that stocks are falling because of the inflationary problems inherited from former President Joe Biden, the market had boomed after Trump’s November election in hopes that his promised tax cuts and deregulation would fuel another economic boom.
But Trump in the months before he took office began threatening massive tariffs on America’s biggest trading partners.
The Dow, which was near its record high when Trump started posting messages on Truth Social about tariffs on November 25, hit one more record high a week later but has fallen nearly 10 per cent since. Russell 2000 never recovered.
“This market is just blatantly sick and tired of the back and forth on trade policy,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth Management.
“It feels as though the administration continues to move the goal posts. With that much uncertainty, it’s impossible for investors to have any confidence.”
Meanwhile, problems are growing for the economy, and Trump’s policies could exacerbate them. On Friday, a University of Michigan consumer sentiment report plunged to its lowest level since the height of the inflation crisis in 2022.
Consumer confidence in February registered its biggest monthly decline since August 2021 and fell the most in the first two months of any year since 2009, according to the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index.
Consumers aren’t spending as much as they used to, as concerns about the economy weigh on their purchasing decisions. Target, Walmart, Delta Air Lines, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Dollar General and Kohl’s said in their most recent earnings reports that tariffs and inflation are leading people to spend less.
Trump acknowledged tariffs could cause a “disturbance” and has declined to rule out a recession, saying his economic plan could be painful for some at first.
Mainstream economists, however, believe Trump may be underplaying how damaging his policies could be. Uncertainty about tariffs is paralysing businesses who are unsure whether to hire and invest.
Mass layoffs of federal workers could seriously damage local economies. And immigration crackdowns could badly hurt the already labour-sapped health care, construction and agriculture industries.
JPMorgan economists alarmingly wrote last week that the US economy now has a 40 per cent chance of falling into a recession this year. That’s up from 30 per cent forecast by JPMorgan at the start of the year.
The bank cited a “less business-friendly stance” from US policy, including a more aggressive trade war than feared, as well as “aggressive efforts” by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to slash federal hiring and spending.
“We see a material risk that the US falls into recession this year owing to extreme US policies,” JPMorgan economists wrote in a note to clients last Friday.
Suddenly ignoring the market
Trump has been noticeably quiet about stocks lately. During his first term he routinely tweeted about market records as a sign of America’s economic might.
Visiting the New York Stock Exchange as recently as December 12, Trump called the stock market “very important” in an interview with CNBC.
“The stock market is very — all of it, you know, all of it together, it’s very important,” Trump said.
“I sort of joked that I actually bought the building across the street because the stock exchange was here. It’s a big deal.”
They threw it all behind Trump – and lost more than $300 billion
But he has changed his tune as stocks first erased their post-inauguration gains and then their post-election gains.
“You can’t really watch the stock market,” Trump said Sunday in an interview with Fox.
“Markets are going to go up and they’re going to go down,” he said in the Oval Office Tuesday.
“I think a lot of the stock market going down was because of the really bad four years that we had, when you look at inflation and all of the other problems, I mean wars and inflation and so many other problems,” Trump said Wednesday at the White House.
But Wall Street doesn’t like being ignored – it’s trying to send the president a message. And it’s a painful one.
Tumbling markets can pose a problem in and of themselves. Seeing markets in the red can sap consumers’ confidence, because many Americans incorrectly believe the Dow Jones serves as a barometer for the health of the US economy. But many people also rely on stocks for their retirement funds, and watching stocks sink sharply gives them pause about their financial position.
“Obviously the stock market can have a significant negative wealth effect if it continues to take a dive,” Yardeni said.
“Trump is going to have to rethink his notion that it’s okay to let the market go down while he is experimenting with tariffs and slashing federal payrolls.”
Investors feel Trump has turned his back on them. Now they are turning their back on him.