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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq soar as Trump announces ’90 day pause’ on tariffs for most countries, ups levies on China
- The Russell 2000 (^RUT) ripped higher on Wednesday as the White House paused tariffs against non-retaliatory countries, fading concerns of a recession.
- Small caps gained more than 7%. The index had been in a bear market over concerns of a full-blown trade war impacting the economy.
- Yields aren’t reacting much to President Trump’s tariff news.
- Shortly following the announcement of Trump’s 90-day reciprocal tariff pause (and more levies on China), the 10-year yield (^TNX) jumped another 12 basis points to trade around 4.38%. That represents a massive 51 basis point swing from Monday’s low of 3.87% — and the biggest three-day jump since December 2001.
- The 30-year yield (^TYX) posted more modest gains but still rose six basis points after it logged its biggest move to the upside since March 2020 earlier in the week. As of the afternoon, the 30-year yield traded at 4.79%.
- Yields and bonds are inversely correlated, meaning higher yields equal falling bond prices. Over the past few trading sessions, the unusual surge in long-term Treasury yields has rattled investors — and it looks like those concerns could continue.
- The entire market is ripping higher as investors digest the Trump tariff pause. But take a look at chip stocks.
- Nvidia (NVDA) and Broadcom (AVGO) are up about 13%. AMD (AMD) and Intel (INTC) are each up 14% or more. Arm (ARM) has added 17%.
- Oil bounced back after Trump announced a pause on his reciprocal tariff plan and increased US levies on Chinese imports.
- West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) rose around 2.5% to trade above $61 a barrel, despite opening the day at just over $58. Brent (BZ=F), the international benchmark, jumped to $64 per barrel.
- Earlier in this day, China — the biggest import of crude — announced it would implement 84% tariffs on US-made goods.
- Sectors soared across the board Wednesday following Trump’s tariff announcement, a stark reversal from the declines seen in recent post-Liberation Day trading sessions.
- Big Tech (XLK) was the biggest gainer, followed by Consumer Discretionary (XLY) and Materials (XLB):
- There it is — a pause in Trump’s reciprocal tariff plans.
- On Wednesday afternoon, the president posted on his social media platform, Truth Social, that he would institute a 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs for a swath of countries while also raising tariffs on China as that tit-for-tat trade war escalates.
- Following this news, stocks were going bonkers, with the Nasdaq (^IXIC) up as much as 8% and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) rising in excess of 6%.
- There is finally some green on the screen in markets.
- The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) was up 0.7%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) rallied about 1.5%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lifted 0.5% or more than 200 points. All three of the major averages were well off their session lows.
- Under the surface things don’t look quite as positive though. At this time of this writing there are 59 more stocks declining in the S&P 500 on Wednesday than there are rising.
- The traditional S&P 500 (^SPX) is market-cap weighted meaning the larger stocks in the index hold more weight. Therefore as they rise, they pull the index higher with it. But if you look at the equal-weighted S&P 500 (^SPXEW), which doesn’t have a company’s size influence its contribution to the index, the story is clear.
- A few large cap stocks are dragging the benchmark higher on Wednesday well the rest of the market is catching less of a bid.
- The S&P 500 (^GSPC) is off nearly 20% from its most recent all-time high on Feb. 19 as fears that President Trump’s tariffs will weigh on economic growth have gripped markets.
- Now, American corporates are set to report first quarter financial results as investors search for any answers on how the changing fiscal policy landscape could impact companies.
- Truist co-CIO Keith Lerner told Yahoo Finance that the recent stock sell-off proves that “the market knows that [earnings] cuts are coming.”
- “What I’m going to be looking for in the earnings season is maybe less about what companies are saying and more how are these stocks [acting], especially some of these ones that have been really beaten up in retail or some of these areas that really have been walloped,” Lerner said.
- If a company cuts its earnings guidance but the stock moves higher it can be a sign that the bad news is already priced in, per Lerner. Piper Sandler chief investment strategist Michael Kantrowitz pointed out that companies are entering this reporting period with “super low expectations.”
- “I don’t actually think earnings are going to be a negative,” Kantrowitz said.
- He pointed to two companies that issued financial updates on Wednesday. Delta Air Lines (DAL) reported revenue growth stalled in the first quarter while also not reaffirming its previous full-year financial guidance. Meanwhile, Walmart (WMT) maintained its first quarter sales guidance but also warned operating profit growth will be lower than initially thought, citing tariff risk.
- Still, both stocks were higher during midday trading.
- Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger reports:
- Read more here.
- Apple (AAPL) stock rose more than 4% on Wednesday as the broader tech trade attempted to stage a comeback following heavy selling in the sector in prior sessions.
- Shares of the iPhone maker are still down more than 20% over the past five days as investors fear President Trump’s aggressive tariff plans will significantly impact Apple’s supply chain.
- In a note to clients on Wednesday, Bank of America analyst Wamsi Mohan cited “stable cash flows, earnings resiliency and potential beneficiary of AI use on edge devices” as reasons he’s keeping a Buy rating on the stock with a $250 price target.
- Elsewhere in tech, Microsoft (MSFT) and Nvidia (NVDA) were up more than 2% while Tesla popped over 4%.
- Yahoo Finance’s David Hollerith reports:
- Read more here.
- Another economist believes the economic turmoil spawned from President Trump’s tariffs will push an already slowing US economy into recession.
- “We are going into a recession,” Renaissance Macro head of economics Neil Dutta wrote in a note on Wednesday. “I don’t think it is especially controversial to say so. I suspect it will be relatively brief, but that the recovery off the lows will be pretty sluggish.”
- Dutta listed tightening financial conditions, reduced government spending, and further escalation of the trade war as potential headwinds to economic growth. Last week, JPMorgan became the first Wall Street bank to call for a recession in 2025 following Trump’s tariff announcements.
- In an interview with Yahoo Finance on Tuesday, Dutta highlighted that the recovery for the economy and the stock market won’t look like the V-shaped snapback seen in 2020.
- He likened the slowdown he anticipates to the early 2000s recession, where a slowing economy was met by various exogenous shocks, including 9/11. This results in a “slog” of a recovery, per Dutta.
- Dutta was early in calling out that economic data had been slowing prior to Trump taking office. He pointed to specific economic data points, like the employment rate of “prime age” workers ages 25-54 declining half a percentage point in the past six months.
- “Go back in history and look at what that implies for recession,” Dutta told Yahoo Finance. “It’s very rare outside of recession.”
- Dutta argued that outside of the tariff story, metrics like an unemployment rate hovering at 4% have masked a labor market that’s already deteriorating. The quits and hiring rates were already near decade lows, reflecting a low-churn labor market.
- For the final months of 2024, the debate in the economic community had been about how long the labor market could hold on thin ice with slowing hiring and limited turnover. In the end, it appears the impact of Trump’s tariffs could be the final straw that turns the data for the worse.
- “[Trump] didn’t have as much of an economic buffer as people think,” Dutta said.
- Just minutes after the stock market opened, President Trump posted on Truth Social “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!!”
- Before sending that message Trump had also posted “BE COOL! Everything is going to work out well. The USA will be bigger and better than ever before!”
- Trump’s tweets come as an escalating trade war has gripped markets. Most recently, China said it will raise its tariff on US goods to 84%. This comes in response to the US initiating 104% duties on China early Wednesday.
- Initially the tariff announcements had weighed on equity market futures, pointing to another bleak open for stocks. But in early trading, both the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) and S&P 500 (^GSPC) were higher. The Nasdaq was up about 1.2% while the S&P 500 was up 0.2%.
- After two straight days of the market seeing green at some point in the day only to later close in the red, perhaps the third time is the charm.
- The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) is up about 0.8% in early trading with the S&P 500 (^GSPC) hovering just above the flat line.
- In individual movers, Apple (AAPL), Nvidia (NVDA), Broadcom (AVGO) and Tesla (TSLA) were all up 3% or more. Below is a look at the Nasdaq 100 (^NDX).
- After futures tied to the major indexes pointed to a lower open for most of the morning, US stocks were a mixed bag in early trading on Wednesday as Wall Street assessed the prospects for trade war after China struck back with an 84% tariff on US goods.
- The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell about 0.1%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) rose over 0.5%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell 0.4%, shedding just over 150 points.
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who has made the Treasury markets a key focus of his early tenure, downplayed a recent sell-off in the bond market and said China’s retaliatory tariffs were “unfortunate.”
- “There’s one of these deleveraging convulsions that’s going on right now in the markets,” Bessent said on Fox Business, via Bloomberg. “It’s in the fixed-income market. There are some very large leverage players who are experiencing losses, that are having to deleverage.”
- And on China:
- The stock market sell-off has a new headwind. The 10-year Treasury yield (^TNX) has ripped higher adding nearly 50 basis points in the past three sessions. This marked the largest jump over a three-day period since 2001.
- And as has been the case over the past two years, a rapid mover higher in rates has weighed on investor’s equity sentiment.
- “It’s definitely a new negative development that really kills the only silver lining that this [market sell-off] story had, which was that, hey, at least rates are falling,” Piper Sandler chief investment strategist Michael Kantrowitz said.
- Typically one would expect rates to fall, as they initially did on the “Liberation Day” tariff announcement, as investors seek a flight to safety trade as markets price in fears of an economic slowdown. But for a variety of reasons, that’s not happening right now.
- And for stock investors it creates one clear takeaway. This market sell-off now has another driver outside of Trump tariff headlines to keep an eye on.
- “It kind of creates this new variable that could add to the volatility during during the day, when there’s not headline news,” Kantrowitz said while also noting regular scheduled Treasury auctions could now be stock market moving events.
- He added, “Really simply, interest rates going up at a time where there’s clearly a growth scare and a recession scare and a great deal of uncertainty is just bad news period.”
- Pharmaceutical stocks were under pressure Wednesday morning after President Trump disclosed that pharma tariffs are coming soon.
- “We are going to be announcing very shortly a major tariff on pharmaceuticals,” Trump said Tuesday at a fundraising gala, per Bloomberg. Trump did not provide further details on the potential duties, but he has previously called for more US drug manufacturing.
- Here’s how shares of major pharmaceutical companies around the world were trading at last check:
- Read more here.
