US stock futures tumble indicating another plummet on Wall Street after Trump’s tariffs
US stock futures opened sharply lower late on Sunday, suggesting a continuation of the two-day selloff that wiped trillions from equity values after the Trump administrationās tariffs announcement last week.
Investors had been anticipating another week of turbulenceĀ as global trading partners reactĀ to the harsher-than-expected tariffs. US S&P 500 E-minis stock futures were last down 4%. Dow E-minis were down 3.8%, while Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 4.6% at the open on Sunday.
In the two days following Trumpās Wednesday tariff announcement, the benchmark S&P 500 index fell 10.5% and lost about $5 trillion in market value. It was the biggest two-day loss since March 2020. Thursday and FridayāsĀ steep slide,Ā put the S&P 500 down more than 17% from its February 19 all-time closing high, and brought it closer to bear market territory, which is typically defined as a 20% decline.
āThe bull market is dead,ā Mark Malek, chief investment officer at Siebert Financial, said ahead of futures opening. āWe might see some gains in the next few days, but for now theyāre not going to be sustainable.ā
The timing of the tariffs news, which coincided with the beginning of the first-quarter earnings season, is contributing to the gloomy outlook, Malek said.
On Sunday morning talk shows, Trumpās top economic advisers sought to portray the tariffs as a savvy repositioning. Treasury Secretary Scott BessentĀ said on NBC Newsā āMeet the PressāĀ that there was āno reasonā to anticipate a recession.
Some traders believe the stock market will at least attempt to stage a comeback of sorts.
āSometime this week itās probably inevitable that we will have an up day,ā said Steve Sosnick, chief investment strategist at Interactive Brokers, ahead of futures opening.
The question remains about the sustainability of any rally.
āWe may see a day this week where screens are green, but any lasting rally may not arrive for three or four weeks,ā said Alex Morris, chief investment officer at F/m Investments. āAt that point, people will start saying weāve taken enough air out of the balloon.ā
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