Sunday, April 6, 2025

WEEKEND WRAP: Trump Tariff Trauma Overwhelms Markets as Globalization Dies; Stocks, Silver, Oil, Slaughtered; Gold Survived Well; Bitcoin Headed Down

What a week! Anything that wasn't nailed down - and some that were - got sold down the river as President Donal J. Trump overturned the applecart of international trade with stinging tariffs on all countries exporting into the United States.

There are nay number of narratives being floated across the media spectrum, but the one most glaring is that Trump's tariffs will raise the price of everything from washing machines to denim jeans, though there's evidence that will not necessarily be the case. More on that below.

Here are a few of the more prominent voices opining on the intent and the impact of Trump's across-the-board import tariffs.

The most prescient posts explaining the tariff scenario are by former CIA Intel Analyst Larry Johnson at Sonar21, and Simplicious, the Thinker on Substack. Both are free, not behind paywalls and deliver somewhat the same message, that the tariffs aren't really about evening out the massive U.S. trade imbalance, but re-orienting the U.S. balance sheet, with an eye toward lowering interest rates on some of the $36+ trillion in U.S. debt obligations.

The Simplicious article links to Stephen Miram's text, A User's Guide to Restructuring the Global Trading System [PDF], making the claim that Trump's tariff plan mirrors Miram's "Guide", especially in terms of deliberately devaluing the U.S. dollar, prompting more companies to re-locate manufacturing facilities in the United States.

Those objectives seem to be the major thrust of Trump's tariffs, and, if he's right, will accomplish both. Reducing the interest burden on outstanding debt while simultaneously promoting the USA as the place to be in the re-ordered global trading complex would be a masterstroke. It will take years to accomplish both, though interest rates have already come down, with the 10-year note hitting 4.01% on Friday.

David Stockman offers a detailed exposition on the tariff levels and an unhealthy degree of criticism, but fails to make any salient points concerning why the tariffs matter, why they were imposed, or what the future holds. Ultimately, Stockman's analysis boils down to just more Trump-bashing rhetoric, with no valuable insights.

As far as U.S. inflation is concerned, the net effect will vary depending on a number of variables, including the level of tariffs (percentage), how the tariff is calculated, and whether the company or country chooses to pass along the cost of the tariff to the end consumer or keep their prices in an affordable range and reduce their profit margin.

The International Trade Administration defines tariffs thusly:


  • A tariff or duty (the words are used interchangeably) is a tax levied by governments on the value including freight and insurance of imported products. Different tariffs applied on different products by different countries.

  • National sales and local taxes, and in some instances customs fees, are often charged in addition to the tariff.

  • The tariff, along with the other assessments, is collected at the time of customs clearance in the foreign port. Tariffs and taxes increase the cost of your product to the foreign buyer and may affect your competitiveness in the market.

Obviously, the calculus is challenging and not uniform. Some companies may export direct to a retailer, others export to wholesalers, making the cost, or price, lower. Different countries are being assessed different rates of tariffs. Some will seek workarounds, like selling to a country with a lower tariff rate and then exporting into the United States at a lower rate. There will be plenty of gaming and negotiation on the tariffs and the end result is not necessarily inflationary.

For example, many of the products subject to Trump's tariffs are supply chain items like car parts, computer chips, small motors, nuts, bolts, etc. Others are discretionary, like most consumer products, such as clothing, household supplies, TVs, electronics, etc.

Where the tariffs will have little effect is on the most essential items, food and energy. Most food consumed in the U.S. is home-grown or raised. The U.S. also produces much of its own energy, having large oil, natural gas, coal, and renewable reserves.

When it comes down to the money in the pockets and wallets of American consumers, the choice will be theirs. If silk shirts from Vietnam become too expensive, people don't have to buy them. The same goes for TVs, socks, shoes, bicycles, toys, and all manner of consumer discretionary goods. The prices of these items will either be too high, in which case the company loses its market share, or at a level consumers can afford, possibly at some profit margin loss to the producer, but maintaining a share of the local market by keeping prices in line.

Thus, those screeching that the tariffs will cause runaway inflation or other evil effects are probably out to lunch, with little understanding of economics or international trade and only looking to score political points.

At the end of the day, the tariffs are paid by the producer or importer at entry. There is no evidence that companies will be passing along the added cost to consumers. Some will, others will eat the cost, live with a lower profit margin and maintain their market.

Some of that helps explain why stocks took a major hit Thursday and Friday. Companies that are dependent on exporting to the U.S., like Nike (NIKE), got slaughtered. Companies that sell - in the main - products made in the United States, like retail grocer Kroger (KR), barely registered a blip. While Nike ended Wednesday, April 2, before the tariffs were announced, at $64.97 and ended the week (April 4) at $57.25 (-11.88%), Kroger closed Wednesday at $67.26 and on Friday at $67.18, a loss of 8 cents, though there were some momentum traders that pushed the stock as high as $71 Friday morning before taking profits the rest of the day.

Taking the comparison a little further, Kroger, your friendly neighborhood grocer, has a PE of 18.29 and a dividend yield of 1.91%, which is OK and somewhat conservative. Year-to-date, it is up 9.86%. Nike's PE is 19.05 with a dividend yiled of 2.79%, and is down 24.34% year-to-date, which skews the PE lower and the dividend yield higher. Essentially, it was overpriced and coming down anyway. The tariffs just accelerated the process.

Trying to make sense of Trump's tariff policies may end up being a fool's gambit. First, the tariff percentages were derived simply by dividing the U.S. trade deficit of a country by its total exports to the U.S.. This was made well-known on Thursday. Here's a prime example:

So, it's already common knowledge that the tariffs calculations were a bunch of bologna. The intention of the tariffs was probably something much different than bringing manufacturing back to the United States, though that certainly seems like a Trumpian, rational move. The real reason is probably to rebalance the books, get more revenue at the borders rather than from the wallets and purses of U.S. citizens.

Throwing the whole world into chaos, ending globalism (free trade), and causing a mini-crash on Wall Street are just bonus material. Trump's eventual goal might even be as far-reaching as shutting down the Federal Reserve and returning to some form of gold standard with currency issued directly by the U.S. treasury. That would take an act of Congress, which still isn't quite on board with the re-structuring plans that are already well underway.


Stocks

To say the least, the week didn't go well for most equity investors, though those with more conservative allocations toward income-producing (dividends) stocks did better than those who were holding high-flyers in the growth department. Apple, Amazon, Nvidia, Nike, and others got taken to the cleaners.

For the Week:
Dow: -3,264.04 (-7.86%)
NASDAQ: -1,735.20 (-10.02%)
S&P 500: 506.86 (-9.08%)
NYSE Composite: -1,651.69 (-8.57%)
Dow Transports: -1,432.34 (-9.82%)

Closing at 15,587.79, the NASDAQ is already in bear market territory. It was down 17.96% as of Thursday's close. Friday's finish put it at -22.73%.

The Dow Jones Transportation Average is even worse, down 25.88% from its November 25, 2024 high of 17,754.38.

All of the major indices are trading below their respective 50 and 200-day and 40-month moving averages and all of them are off more than 10% (correction) from recent highs, which may not be seen again for a very long time. How long? Five years, 10, 15, maybe never. Like it or not, the selling, now that Trump has induced chaos and dis-inflation into the economic picture, is likely far from over.

Defensive names, especially those in the consumer staples sector, should outperform 80-90% of the market in the near term. With a recession nearly built-in at this point, another 20-30% downside for all of the major averages over the next six to 12 months is not out of the question. There are certain to be days of huge upside moves ahead, but the economic data should continue to point toward slowing growth and a combination of inflation, dis-inflation, and outright deflation that will confound most professional and individual traders.

Anybody who was largely short at the end of January has made huge profits and are not about to give up on their positions. Weeks ahead may prove challenging at best, though a strong bounce should be part of the analysis. Stocks, while they were severely overvalued for years, are still at very high levels.

The major averages have only knocked off gains from the last year or so. If this is the beginning of a major structural change in global trade, the U.S. is likley to suffer more pain, as will markets in most of the developed nations in Asia and Europe.

Stock market breaks often accompany recessions. First quarter data is suggesting that the U.S. is already in one. Most of Europe is in recession for certain and there's every indication that the economies of England, France, and Germany are going to be destroyed by a combination of prior bad decisions (Ukraine, Green Energy, etc.) and now, a realignment of trade arrangements which are not to the EU's benefit.

Trump was urging Fed Chair Powell to lower rates and "stop playing politics," but Powell isn't about to rush to judgement and bail Wall Street out with more cuts designed to cheapen the cost of borrowing. The market is more likely to do Trump's bidding than the Fed.

The next FOMC meeting isn't until May 6-7. Prior to that a slew of data will be available to the FOMC, including 1Q GDP (last Thursday of April, the 24th), April Non-farm Payrolls (May 2), and the usual ISM data, CPI, PPI, etc.


Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
02/28/2025 4.38 4.37 4.38 4.32 4.32 4.25 4.08
03/07/2025 4.38 4.36 4.33 4.34 4.29 4.29 4.05
03/14/2025 4.37 4.36 4.33 4.33 4.30 4.29 4.09
03/21/2025 4.36 4.33 4.33 4.33 4.29 4.26 4.04
03/28/2025 4.38 4.35 4.35 4.33 4.30 4.26 4.04
04/04/2025 4.36 4.35 4.36 4.28 4.25 4.14 3.86

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
02/28/2025 3.99 3.99 4.03 4.14 4.24 4.55 4.51
03/07/2025 3.99 4.01 4.09 4.21 4.32 4.66 4.62
03/14/2025 4.02 4.00 4.09 4.20 4.31 4.65 4.62
03/21/2025 3.94 3.92 4.00 4.12 4.25 4.60 4.59
03/28/2025 3.89 3.91 3.98 4.11 4.27 4.65 4.64
04/04/2025 3.68 3.66 3.72 3.84 4.01 4.44 4.41

Movemnent on the treasury yield curve was dramatic, and, in terms of spreads, more flat than ever, with full spectrum (30-days out to 30-years) squeezed down to a mere +5 basis points, easily the lowest its been since dis-inversion back in early December of last year. 2s-10s were more moderated, ending up at +33 basis points, down just five from last week.

With the market taking pains to adjust to Trump's new trade reality, dropping the 30-year bond a massive 23 basis points over the course of the week will have the general effect of weakening the dollar, which is one of the targets of Trump's strategy, though what the government needs are lower short-term rates by which to deal with the deficit. For now, the government should be content to issue one, two, and three-year debt, swapping out some of the short-term bunk left over by Janet Yellen.

Trump has put the ball squarely in Powell and the Fed's court. Expect the President to continue haranguing the Fed with calls to lower the federal funds rate. He might get some support from the banking community and Wall Street, who surely wouldn't mind overnight borrowing at 3.00-3.25%, but it seems, because the Fed isn't quite convinced it has done enough on inflation, lower rates will have to wait, for now.

Spreads:

2s-10s
9/15/2023: -69
9/22/2023: -66
9/29/2023: -44
10/06/2023: -30
10/13/2023: -41
10/20/2023: -14
10/27/2023: -15
11/03/2023: -26
11/10/2023: -43
11/17/2023: -44
11/24/2023: -45
12/01/2023: -34
12/08/2023: -48
12/15/2023: -53
12/22/2023: -41
12/29/2023: -35
1/5/2024: -35
1/12/2024: -18
1/19/2024: -24
1/26/2024: -19
2/2/2024: -33
2/9: -31
2/16: -34
2/23: -41
3/1: -35
3/8: -39
3/15: -41
3/22: -37
3/28: -39
4/5: -34
4/12: -38
4/19: -35
4/26: -29
5/3: -31
5/10: -37
5/17: -39
5/24: -47
5/31: -38
6/7: -44
6/14: -47
6/21: -45
6/28: -35
7/5: -32
7/12: -27
7/19: -24
7/26: -16
8/2: -08
8/9: -11
8/16: -17
8/23: -09
8/30: 00
9/6: +06
9/13: +09
9/20: +18
9/27: +20
10/4: +5
10/11: +13
10/18: +13
10/25: +14
11/1: +16
11/8: +5
11/15: +12
11/22: +4
11/29: +5
12/6: +5
12/13: +15
12/20: +22
12/27: +31
1/3: +32
1/10: +37
1/17: +34
1/24: +36
1/31: +36
2/7: +20
2/14: +21
2/21: +23
2/28: +25
3/7: +33
3/14: +29
3/21: +31
3/28: +38
4/4: +33

Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
9/15/2023: -109
9/22/2023: -99
9/29/2023: -82
10/06/2023: -64
10/13/2023: -82
10/20/2023: -47
10/27/2023: -54
11/03/2023: -76
11/10/2023: -80
11/17/2023: -93
11/24/2023: -95
12/01/2023: -105
12/08/2023: -123
12/15/2023: -154
12/22/2023: -149
12/29/2023: -157
1/5/2024: -133
1/12/2024: -135
1/19/2024: -118
1/26/2024: -116
2/2/2024: -127
2/9: -117
2/16: -103
2/23: -112
3/1: -121
3/8: -125
3/15: -109
3/22: -112
3/28: -115
4/5: -93
4/12: -87
4/19: -77
4/26: -70
5/3: -85
5/10: -87
5/17: -94
5/24: -99
5/31: -83
6/7: -92
6/14: -113
6/21: -103
6/28: -96
7/5: -101
7/12: -108
7/19: -103
7/26: -104
8/2: -143
8/9: -131
8/16: -138
8/23: -141
8/30: -121
9/6: -125
9/13: -117
9/20: -80
9/27: -80
10/4: -75
10/11: -58
10/18: -54
10/25: -38
11/1: -18
11/8: -23
11/15: -10
11/22: -12
11/29: -40
12/6: -23
12/13: +18
12/20: +29
12/27: +38
1/3: +38
1/10: +54
1/17: +41
1/24: +40
1/31: +36
2/7: +32
2/14: +32
2/21: +31
2/28: +13
3/7: +24
3/14: +25
3/21: +23
3/28: +26
4/4: +5

Oil/Gas

WTI crude oil got absolutely crushed in the Tariff Trauma, closing out Friday in New York at $62.32 a barrel, the lowest closing price since August, 2021, after the Biden administration made sure the price would rise by cutting off drilling and exploration and promoting the "Green New Deal." Last week's closeout price of $69.04 on Friday, March 28, likely won't be seen again for years. Most of the major producers in the Middle East and elsewhere in OPEC+ have already begun boosting production. Oil is headed to the $50s in short order and along with it the price of gas in the U.S., Europe and elsewhere, a welcome relief for consumers.

Gasbuddy.com is reporting the national average for a gallon of unleaded regular gas at the pump at $3.22, up a dime from last week's $3.12. Gas prices haven't actually declined much since January and February and were actually lower in November and December, but, a year ago, the national average was $3.52, so there has been progress. Of course, gas buyers won't see the effect of the huge drop in the price of oil for a few more weeks as stations use up inventory purchased at higher prices.

Gas prices this week were higher across the country, led by California is up 17 cents this week to $4.90. Oklahoma, at $2.73, is the cheapest, followed right behind by Mississippi ($2.74), though both are higher than last week and significantly up from the lows of December and January. Tennessee ($2.77) and Louisiana ($2.81) are next up the ladder.

Outside of Pennsylvania ($3.40) and Maryland ($3.26), New England and East coast states all range between $2.85 (New Hampshire) and $3.14 (Delaware). New York was two cents higher at $3.09.

Every state in the Southeast is under $3.00 except Florida ($3.16) and Georgia ($3.03). The Midwest is also elevated with Illinois at $3.49. Every state in the Midwest other than Kansas ($2.88), Kentucky ($2.89) and Missouri ($2.95) are back over $3.00 a gallon. The West continues to have the highest prices. Along with California, Washington is the only state above $4.00, at $4.34, though Oregon ($3.96) and Nevada ($3.91) are getting dangerously close. Idaho is at $3.33, while neighboring Utah is $3.19.

Sub-$3.00 gas can be found in at fewer states this week, with just 15 hitting the mark as opposed to 24 last week and 33 two weeks past. Prospects for lower gas prices are very good now, though it's likely going to be a little while before Trump gets them down where he'd like them, with a national average around $2.60.

On the supply side, the president's "drill, baby, drill" directive has been met with yawns and inconsistent support by oil producers who are reluctant to spend money on new projects when prices are, or could be, falling. While depressed oil and gas prices are a boon to the overall economy, they hurt profits at the major drillers and refiners, prompting a general wait-and-see attitude currently. Along with his tariff regime, the path to lower gas prices will likely come from lower demand with some contribution from greater Middle East supply.


Bitcoin

This week: $78,955.22
Last week: $83,825.10
2 weeks ago: $85,049.05
6 months ago: $63,514.35
One year ago: $69,412.30
Five years ago: $6,886.60

Bitcoin held up very well through the end of the week, and many - especially gold and silver holders and stackers - wondered why. Sunday afternoon is supplying the response: whales were "hodling" through the tariff carnage, waiting until nobody was looking (Sunday) to drop the price down a few thousand dollars with probably more declines straight ahead.

Bitcoin is going to go to $70,000 in a hurry, and it will still be massively overpriced. Anybody "hodling" or holding any significant amount of crypto is just plain stupid. There's nothing there at all and one has to question, when real things like gold and silver are going down, stocks are getting decimated and real estate will soon feel the pinch, why should something like Bitcoin or any other crypto element be spared?

The selling began in earnest just after noon Eastern Time and seems very suspicious. Why wasn't bitcoin deprecated like any other asset on Thursday and Friday? Maybe because it's a massive fraud? Could be.

Bitcoin has not been over $100,00 since February 4. There's almost no chance of it going back to that level. Falling to around $65,000-$70,000 before an even deeper plummet, seems the most likely direction, based on bitcoin's past history of crashes. The chaos in financial markets virtually guarantees bitcoin's demise and those of the rest of the thousands of crypto-mintages that are going to vaporize a large amount of what is perceived to be wealth. The worst part about bitcoin or crypto as an asset is that you can't even say one's wealth is "on paper" because any measure of crypto is electronic. It's not "on" anything except a computer screen. Crypto is absolutely worthless.


Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 103.53; last week: 88.74

Per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 3/9: $2,917.70
Gold price 3/16: $2,993.60
Gold price 3/23: $3,028.20
Gold price 3/30: $3,090.00
Gold price 4/6: $3,056.10

Silver price 3/9: $32.55
Silver price 3/16: $34.11
Silver price 3/23: $33.29
Silver price 3/30: $34.82
Silver price 4/6: $29.52

The significance of the degree by which silver was sold off on the COMEX last week cannot be understated. The severity of the declines sent the gold-silver ratio to unfathomable levels above 100, which, in the longer view, is completely out of bounds and an indication of just how corrupted, unreliable and unrealistic Western measures such as the COMEX and LBMA's London fix really are. These relics of price suppression are - like the London Gold Pool back in the 1960s - close to being entirely broken and out-of-touch.

For what it's worth, silver's actual, real world price is nowhere near $29.52, which was the COMEX settlement price at the close of trading on Friday. That can clearly be seen at retail and also, if ever contract that closed at that price had stood for delivery, the COMEX would have had to declare "Force Majeure” (which they do routinely, though not on an official basis) and shut itself down.

Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (numismatics excluded, free shipping):

Item/Price Low High Average Median
1 oz silver coin: 36.86 41.00 37.90 37.57
1 oz silver bar: 36.00 47.66 39.90 38.92
1 oz gold coin: 3,187.30 3,297.75 3,240.50 3,243.19
1 oz gold bar: 3,100.00 3,206.25 3,171.41 3,177.53

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) declind severely, to $38.57, losing $4.99 from the March 30 price of $43.56 per troy ounce.

While silver prices at retail did tumble, with eBay pricing down nearly $5.00 overall, the drawdown was not as severe as what the COMEX had been pricing in with steep declines Thursday and Friday. Gold also held up relatively well, with finished one-ounce pieces remaining well above the $3,100 level.

Buyers and sellers on eBay managed to find a sweet spot between $37 and $39. Those prices, while constituting a high premium over spot, reaffirms silver's value to stackers. The COMEX price and LBMA fix are quickly becoming little more than what they were designed for, a discounting mechanism, a definite trend developing between the COMEX "paper" price, where every 1000-ounce contract has multiple claims and settlement is made in fiat, not metal.

The same can be said for gold. Despite the rigged markdowns at week's end, buyers continue to step up and buy at high premium prices, the concept being more of having gold in hand regardless of price during the current turmoil. More and more individuals are becoming cognizant of the concept that gold and silver are money, regardless of what "official" price-setters determine in their relentless discounting against fiat currencies, especially the US dollar.

The last time stocks, bonds, and precious metals all fell at the same time - circa the GFC in 2008-09 - gold and silver recovered much more quickly than their financial rivals.

With central banks continuing to buy gold in quantity, gold's price should remain near record levels. The tariff event horizon, while potentially devastating for the FIRE (Financial, Insurance, Real Estate) does not apply to precious metals to the same degree.


WEEKEND WRAP

This site, FinanceCharts.com, was recommended to Money Daily by a friendly source. Worth a look if you are doing your own research and trading.

Finally, where is the world headed. The best guess is that everybody - from billionaires to sovereign nations to middle and lower class folks - is going to feel poorer, for a while. The effects of chaotic economic turmoil cannot last long and adjustments will occur in all aspects of the human condition. In the current environment, people holding stocks are already a bit nervous and possibly scared, to the point at which some panic selling is likely to occur. They may turn out to be the lucky ones as the stock market's deterioration proceeds.

Like the government is full of corruption and fraud, stocks don't really provide value, only the appearance of it, and remain massively overpriced. The Shiller PE stands today at 31.31, after attaining a high above 38.50 a few months back. That should be considered a good start because reversion to the mean requires 17.23, which is less than half of the number at present.

Can stocks fall another 50% from here? Sure, why not? People don't like losing money, and the more they believe they are losing, the more likely they are to make very, very bad moves.

A year from now, people will still be scratching their heads, trying to figure out just what happened. Most of them will come to the wrong conclusions. Poor people might find themselves a little better off, able to buy some things, like groceries, clothes, and household goods, at lower prices. Some may even be able to consider buying a home. Being middle class may not sound like such a bad idea again.

At the same time, a lot of formerly "rich" people will not feel so high and mighty, though, relatively thinking, they'll still be better off than most. There will be more than a few people on Wall Street looking very, very stupid, as if there aren't enough already.

In the end, measuring wealth is a relativity game. It's all about what you're measuring against.

At the Close, Friday, April 4, 2025:
Dow: 38,314.86, -2,231.04 (-5.50%)
NASDAQ: 15,587.79, -962.81 (-5.82%)
S&P 500: 5,074.08, -322.44 (-5.97%)
NYSE Composite: 17,618.61, -1,148.59 (-6.12%)

For the Week:
Dow: -3,264.04 (-7.86%)
NASDAQ: -1,735.20 (-10.02%)
S&P 500: 506.86 (-9.08%)
NYSE Composite: -1,651.69 (-8.57%)
Dow Transports: -1,432.34 (-9.82%)



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Friday, April 4, 2025

Stocks Suffer Worst Session Since Pandemic Losses of 2020; China Slaps 34% Tariffs on U.S. Imports; March Jobs +228,000

Thursday was the ultimate risk-off day in the wake of US President Trump's Liberation Day, announcing more aggressive tariffs than most of the dull-headed, so-called "sharpies" on Wall Street supposedly anticipated.

Stocks tumbled (SPX -4.8%, NDX -5.4%, DJI -4%, RUT -6.6%) while the vast majority of sectors saw losses, with Energy, Tech, Consumer Discretionary and Industrials seeing losses greater than 5% on the day.

The only sector to close green was Consumer Staples. Read that again as "buy grocers" and "buy agriculture."

How bad was it? April 3, 2025 was the largest one-day point loss on the NASDAQ, -1,050.44 points, worse than the previous record-holder, March 16, 2020, at ?970.28. That session, at the beginning of the COVID crisis, retains the recod for largest percentage loss of ?12.32%. Thursday's 5.97% loss on the NASDAQ was substantial, though it didn't even make it to the top 20 largest percentage losses.

On the Dow, the loss of 1,679.39 points was the fifth-worse ever, though the percentage loss of -3.98% doesn't even reach the 50 worst individual sessions. The all-time record for point loss was that infamous March 16, 2020 session, in which the Dow declined a massive 2,997.10 points.

The S&P 500 suffered its second-worst point loss ever, ?274.45, again, trailing the March 16, 2020 loss of 324.89 points and ?11.98%, which ranks third in percentage terms, behind October 18, 1987's -20.47 and October 10, 1929's ?12.34% > The ?4.84% posted by the S&P on Thursday was possibly near the bottom of the 100 worst sessions in S&P 500 history.

Incidentally, the Dow Jones Transportation Average was absolutely slaughtered, losing 1,371.64 points and -9.15%, to close at 13,621.34, its lowest level since October, 2023

In weekly terms, it's not quite as grim, though the cumulative effect of the past six weeks is hitting investors where it hurts. Through Thursday's close, thanks to gains Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, the Dow is down 1037.97 points (2.50%). The NASDAQ has shed 772.38, or 4.48%, and the S&P is down 184.42 (3.30%).

Those figures are likely to become even worse with Friday's trading ahead, as China announced retaliatory tariffs to begin April 10 on all U.S. imports of 34 percent overnight. That's pushed stock futures to levels rivaling Thursday's, with Dow futures off more than 1,000 points, the NASDAQ down more than 500, and the S&P losing about 140 points a half hour prior to the opening bell.

Friday morning's Non-farm payroll reports from the BLS showed 228,000 jobs created in March with the unemployment rate holding steady, at 4.2%. The numbers were largely in line with expectations and pale before the importance of the widening tariff trauma.

Let's play a little inside baseball, as it is that season. There wasn't a soul in lower Manhattan that didn't see this coming a mile away, maybe three or thirty miles away. At least the "best and brightest" should have. The chart patterns of the first three days of this week reveals the Wall Street mango without any skin. Banks and their brokerages bought stocks with client money Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, and panic sold those very shares on Thursday. Rest assured, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, and various other major players didn't lose a dime today. Their clients, did, but, so what? Things happen.

There's also a preponderance of political overtones to Thursday's whap. Europe hates Trump. CNN hates Trump. Lots of Hollywood big-money actors hate Trump. Democrats, overwhelmingly hate Trump.

Why not give the guy a shot? He's not only one of the most successful entrepreneurs of his generation, he's won the presidency of the United States of America three times!

Perhaps he has more than a little understanding of what he's doing in terms of international trade, commerce, government, taxes, wealth, freedom, and prosperity.

Keep eyes and ears tuned into the mainstream media, AKA, the narrative. Be forewarned, however, excessive viewing of financial news networks can result in loss of focus on your personal wealth and prosperity, which, bottom line, is what really matters and why we're here. Inability, for whatever reason, to manage your own money results in days like Thursday, as nest-eggs were diminished in custodial accounts. The days of passive investing, holding your money at a brokerage over which you have no control, are over. Events of the past 20 or more years should offer enough evidence of the rigged monetary system controlling the United States and much of the rest of the world.

It's like being the head waiter at a house of pleasure. It's a great gig, but you know it's not going to last.

If you want to retire with some dough put away, you should be picking your own investments, allocating your capital yourself. People do it because it's convenient and it works. Without a doubt, returns on equities, globally, have been agreeable if not outstanding since the GFC in '08 and the bottom in '09. Until Thursday.

We're still in the early stages of what is undeniably a bear market. Readers of Money Daily have been well-informed of the recent change in the primary trend and should not have been surprised at the depth of Thursday’s selloff. There's further to go, looking ahead to the first estimate of 1Q 2025 GDP on the last Thursday of April (24th) as the next watershed event. The next three weeks are likely to be quite volatile, with days of gains and losses, but pressure to the downside is likely to dominate consensus thinking.

Markets abhor uncertainty and Trump's tariffs have captured the market. The plan President Trump outlined in the Rose Garden Wednesday afternoon puts a premium on uncertainty, inducing mal-investment and speculation on an even grander scale as through the super-bubble of the last 15 years, give or take.

Trump's tariffs have put everyone on notice: compete or die. The larger objective is to eliminate the wholly unconstitutional personal income tax. There's a reason the current administration went after the IRS with a vengeance early on. They seek to eliminate it. Trump has said so himself on more than a few occasions. In the mind of a businessman, revenue should always exceed expenditures. It's the nature of profitability. Running the government on tariff revenue and eliminating the payroll tax (a holdover from world War II), reduces the burden on the citizenry while putting extra cash in their hands, overall, a win-win for the American middle class.

All that said, markets are set to open on a fearful Friday with everything from gold and silver to stock futures to WTI crude oil, which is trading below $62 per barrel.

At the Close, Thursday, April 3, 2025:
Dow: 40,545.93, -1,679.39 (-3.98%)
NASDAQ: 16,550.61, -1,050.44 (-5.97%)
S&P 500: 5,396.52, -274.45 (-4.84%)
NYSE Composite: 18,767.19, -765.56 (-3.92%)
Dow Transports: 13,621.34, -1,371.64 (-9.15%)

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Trump's Tariffs Rattle Markets Globally; Europe Hard Hit; U.S. Stock Futures at Extreme Lows

For the last three sessions, the major indices have followed a nearly identical pattern, beginning with futures down, opening in the red, only to gain throughout the day and finish positive.

Making it four straight is going to take some doing after President Trump sent markets into a tailspin, announcing his worldwide tariffs Wednesday afternoon at a White House Rose Garden ceremony.

Essentially, Trump's tariffs - which became effective at midnight Wednesday - break down thusly:

  • Baseline 10% tariff on all imports
  • 25% tariffs on all auto imports
  • Reciprocal tariffs amounting to 1/2 of the tariffs the target nation imposes on U.S. imports.

Notable among trading partners hit with high tariffs are some of the largest. China: 34%; Taiwan: 32%; India: 26%; Japan: 24%; European Union: 20%.

Goods from Mexico and Canada that comply with the USMCA trade agreement between the three countries will largely remain exempt from tariffs, except for auto exports and steel and aluminum which fall under separate tariff policies.

Trump's bold agenda stunned markets worldwide, sending U.S. stock futures tumbling to extremes. Japan's NIKKEI fell 2.77% in Thursday trading. Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 1.52%. Markets in China and India were much less affected, finishing the day with marginal losses.

European stocks are having trouble digesting the new trading paradigm.

England's FTSE 100 is down 123.24 points (-1.43%).

Germany's DAX is losing 444.98 points (-1.99%).

France's CAC 40 is down 214.56 (-2.73%).

EURO STOXX 50 has shed 141.99 points (-2.68%).

Euronext 100 Index is down 40.32 (-2.58%).

With less than an hour before the opening bell, the day is shaping up as a painful one all around.

WTI crude oil was hammered overnight and into the morning, down 6.64% at $66.95 per barrel. Gold is well off its recent highs, down $67 at $3,098.50 (-2.15%). Silver has lost more than 7% and is still dropping, around $32.15 per ounce.

While traders may have thought themselves devilishly smart by gaming stocks the first three days of the week, this looks like a condition of "buy the rumor, sell the news" writ large.

Stock futures are ugly: Dow: -1,204 (-2.83%), NASDAQ: -790 (4.00%); S&P 500: -196 (-3.44%).

It will be interesting and instructive to see if the futures result in sustained losses throughout the session or traders opt for bottom fishing at this watershed moment. With tariff trauma the order of the day, Friday's March Non-farm payrolls report from the BLS is looking to be somewhat inconsequential.

At the Close, Wednesday, April 2, 2025:
Dow: 42,225.32, +235.36 (+0.56%)
NASDAQ: 17,601.05, +151.16 (+0.87%)
S&P 500: 5,670.97, +37.90 (+0.67%)
NYSE Composite: 19,532.74, +134.46 (+0.69%)

Gaming the System with Trump Tariffs Today; Best and Worst-Performing Assets of 1Q 2025

For the second straight day, speculators have played chicken with the market, sending stocks on the major indices from morning losses to afternoon gains in what looks to be a "buy the rumor, sell the news" scenario centered upon President Trump's release of his promised tariffs sceduled for 3:00 pm ET Wednesday (today).

Thus far, the zero-day options traders and long-positioned investors have had their way with markets. In consideration of the timing of the tariff announcement, bing late in the trading session, there's a good possibility that trading will follow the same "dare, double dare, triple dare" path right up until the decisive moment, much in the way traders play FOMC policy statements.

On the other hand, the gaming and teasing is likely to have set up shorts with a golden opportunity, able to play put options or outright shorting of stocks and indices from a higher level than anticipated. It's a safe bet that the people sending stocks higher are one and the same that will be shorting Wednesday afternoon. It's just business, how the game is played in the Wall Street casino.

Trump is likely to announce tariffs of up to 20% on trading partners across the global spectrum, with special attention to the usual suspects, China, Japan, and the EU trade bloc, the wild card being the actual date of impostion of said tariffs. While the market anticipates the tariffs to be on the extreme end, there almost certainly will be a lag between today's announcement and the actual levying of tariffs, allowing the administration time for negotiation and new agreements and understandings with various trade partners.

There's also a great potential for retaliatory or "in kind" tariffs levied on U.S. exports into foreign markets. Some countries may consider playing "hard ball" with Trump, suffer the consequences and move ahead with their own priorities.

Bottom line, while April 2nd may indeed be Trump's "Liberation Day," the actual levying and impact may be weeks or months ahead. In that scenario, expect the longs to be on the right side of the trade, sending stocks higher as shorts scramble to cover their - for now - bad bets, leaving global markets on a razor's edge.

Elsewhere, gold and silver continue to reach higher. Early on Wednesday morning, gold futures traded as high as $3,167, silver up to $34.81. Spot markets marked up gold at $3,134 and silver at $34.05.

WTI crude continued to catch the eye, trading as high as $71.93, reflecting the belief that oil will be affected by the coming tariffs. That may be wishful thinking on the part of oil barons. If the tariffs are levied and long-lasting, slowing trade is a real possibility, which would send oil prices lower based on declining demand.

On the labor front, Tuesday's JOLTS report was inconsequential. This morning, ADP reported private employers added 155,000 jobs in March, better than expected, but, with little effect on stock futures, which are tanking. Dow futures: -323; NASDAQ futures: -232; S&P futures: -55.

With Wednesday's game plan in hand, the following - published this morning in the April issue of idleguy.com - takes a look back at 1st quarter winners and losers. (Note: will be updated, reposted as time allows)

To say that the first quarter of 2025 has been turbulent would be understating the obvious. It's been testing, nerve-wracking, and filled with uncertainty.

Of utmost interest at this juncture is trying to understand or game out what comes next and maybe it's worth looking at what has and hasn't worked so far to get some ideas going forward.

Starting with everybody’s favorite (because it’s been so easy), stocks did not perform well at all. The major indices nosedived through the quarter, though the path down wasn’t by any means a straightforward one, as it usually isn’t.

Financial news outlets have been blaring about how the first quarter was the worst since 2022. Boo-hoo! Outside of the quick and ultimately painless COVID collapse of 2020, stocks have been on a straight line to Olympus since the GFC of 2008-09.

Buy and hold investors had such an easy time of it, any little disruption in the force that is Wall Street is seen as some kid of rude, unwarranted intrusion into their almost-perfect existence, where unicorns romp about on the lawns and returns from stock market investments provide for all the luxuries life can afford. Such is the attitude of the horde that has never experienced financial pain and suffering, the kind of dispirited detachment that has preceded almost every other major market correction or crash.

At the same time, those insufferable goldbugs have been making out like masked bandits at a train heist. Whether they’re right or wrong about “honest money”, de-dollarization, or the evils of fractional reserve banking, for the past three months - and for pretty much the past year, two years, and 5 years - they won. They beat the stock market. Get over it.

Rather than debating the finer points of Keynesian or Austrian economics, let’s let the numbers do the talking with the biggest winners and losers of the first quarter of 2025.

Winners 1Q % Gain Losers 1Q % Loss
Gold +19.28% NASDAQ -10.42%
Silver +18.37% S&P 500 -4.59%
S&P 3X Short EFT (SDS) +9.10% Dow 30 -1.28%
S&P Bear 3X EFT (SPXS) +13.38 Tesla (TSLA) -35.83%
CVS Health (CVS) +52.79 Nvidia (NVDA) -19.29%
Okta (OKTA) +33.53% Apple (AAPL) -11.30%
Germany (DAX) +11.32% Microsoft (MSFT) -10.94%
Philip Morris (PM) +33.06% Amazon (AMZN) -13.36%
France (CAC) +6.52% Astera Labs (ALAB) -54.95%
England (FTSE) +5.01% Trade Desk (TTD) -53.44%
Newmont (NEM) +30.48% Alphabet (GOOG) -17.96%
SuperMicro (SMCI) +12.14% Teradyne (TER) -34.40%
AT&T (T) +25.79% On Semi (ON) -35.46%
Hong Kong (HSI) +15.25% United Airlines (UAL) -28.89%
Kroger (KR) +10.70% Delta Airlines (DAL) -27.93%
Copper +24.81% Deckers (DECK) -44.95%
Spain (IBEX) +13.29% Lululemon (LULU) -25.98%
Harmony Gold (HMY) +79.90 Best Buy (BBY) -14.21%
Agilon Health (AGL) +227.89 Williams Sonoma (WSM) -14.62%
ExxonMobil (XOM) +10.56% Nike (NKE) -16.11%
Visa (V) +10.89% Carnival (CCL) -21.63%
Verizon (VZ) +13.43% Bitcoin (BTC) -10.63%
Deere & Co. (DE) +10.78% Etherium (ETH) -45.26%
Coca-Cola (KO) +15.03% Cardano (ADA) -21.42%
Yum! Brands (YUM) +17.29% XRP (XRP) -32.05%
Chevron (CVX) +15.50% Dogecoin (DOGE) -46.18%

The figures presented here represent gains or loss from December 31, 2024 through March 31, 2025. As such, some may be a little distorted or skewed due to the timing of the readings. In the case of the major indices, for instance, the end of December was near a low off late November - early December highs. Additionally, stocks rallied strongly in January before leveling off in February and falling in March.

Admittedly, it was a lot easier to find losers than winners. When almost everything is moving in the same direction, it’s tough to find those who are swimming upstream, against the general flow.

Now, there you have it. Do you now sell the winners and buy the losers? Or vice versa, doubling down on success and/or failure. While catching falling knives is usually left to circus performers, it’s equally dangerous to believe that some kind of bottom has been put in place and those stocks or assets that crashed and burned for the past three months are going to suddenly reverse course and rise majestically like the sun over Mount Fiji.

That kind of thing only happens in movies, and usually in bad ones.

A bit of nibbling might satisfy the animal spirits, but most professionals are urging a more cautious and patient approach. It would be prudent to keep an eye out for complete capitulation before attempting to go “all in.” It’s times like these that one needs to appreciate the difference between return on capital and return of capital.


One asset that managed to hold itself together pretty well was cash. Those good old crinkly Federal Reserve Notes didn’t lose as much as a percent or two, and, depending on what you were buying with it, might even had a slight uptick in value.

One thing that wasn’t useful to spend cash on was gasoline. Even though fuel is down from a year ago (thank God!) prices at the pump actually increased during the first three months of 2025, compared with November and December of 2024. Regional differences and urban/rural differentials vary, but overall, gas prices that seemed to be going down are actually going back up.

One might have been able to procure some savings at the supermarket, depending on whether or not you enjoy eggs for breakfast every morning. Prices have been sliding in most locales the past few months. Nothing great, but big chains like Krogers, Publix, Wegman’s and others have been experiencing some oversupply in certain categories and have been marking down, often substantially. One thing Americans don’t have to worry about is starvation. We have plenty of food, the trick being able to afford to buy it.

Cars, both used and new, have come down to more reasonable levels. How much of the reasonableness occurred in the first quarter is probably more a matter of how well your local dealer is doing and your skills of negotiation. America also has no shortage of cars, trucks, SUVs, motorcycles, RVs, and ATVs.

Looking both backwards and forwards, stock charts of the major averages from the first quarter appear eerily similar to those of the first quarter of 2022. That 2022 downturn didn’t end until November. If stocks are headed on a similar trajectory, there are further declines ahead. If not, well, there are going to be a lot of speculators walking funny for being wrong-footed at the most opportune time. It’s a tough call, but the bears seem to be having their way of late. There may be a bit of turbulence before Elon Musk’s rocket reaches maximum thrust, headed for Trump’s “golden age.”

The choice is yours as to which ways your financial well-being should proceed. Choose wisely. Or, like most people with passive investment accounts, let a “professional” choose for you. After all, they know best, don’t they? At the Close, Tuesday, April 1, 2025: Dow: 41,989.96, -11.80 (-0.03%) NASDAQ: 17,449.89, +150.60 (+0.87%) S&P 500: 5,633.07, +21.22 (+0.38%) NYSE Composite: 19,398.28, +2.42 (+0.01%)

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Trump Tariff Trauma Being Played to the Hilt by Wall Street Sharps; Gold Continues Record-Breaking Streak; JOLTS Due 10 AM

Monday's day-long buying spree - after futures sent the majors to lows of the day just after the open - was largely the result of momentum traders playing 0DTE (Zero Days to Expiration) options and dumb money piling in to pump the market in what can only be considered a prototypical bear market rally.

The Dow round-tripped to the tune of 900 points from the morning lows into the goosed-up close for a neat one percent gain. The S&P and NYSE Composite followed the same pattern, while the NASDAQ, which was down nearly 470 points before 10:00 am ET, didn't quite make it to positive ground, but it wasn't for lack of effort, closing down a mere 23 points.

Call Monday's trading the pump part of the pump-and-dump, because Tuesday (and probably Wednesday) is going to start off pretty darn ugly. Sooner or later - with Trump's tariffs set to launch on Wednesday, the markets are likely to resume their downward trajectory. Today could be a capitulation-like event, as there aren't many traders keen on holding overnight into Wednesday's tariff reveal, especially after the Washington Post ran a story Tuesday morning citing Trump officials saying that 20% across-the-board tariffs could be unleashed April 2nd.

Trump, admittedly a "superstitious guy", didn't want to start off his tariff tsunami on April Fool's Day, purposely pushing back the timing to April 2nd. That seems to have been right up Wall Street's alley, giving the sharpies an additional day of game-playing with people's retirement and speculation accounts.

With the opening bell due to ring within minutes, stock futures are bouncing off the morning lows. Dow futures: -158; NASDAQ futures: -51; S&P futures: -14.

Meanwhile, gold continues to ramp higher, hitting another in a series of all-time highs overnight into the U.S. AM, hitting a high of $3,176 on the COMEX. Silver is still struggling with $35 on the COMEX, with spot prices hanging in the high $33 range.

The March JOLTS survey is due out at 10:00 am ET.

Let's get ready to rumble, fools!

At the Close, Monday, March 31, 2025:
Dow: 42,001.76, +417.86 (+1.00%)
NASDAQ: 17,299.29, -23.70 (-0.14%)
S&P 500: 5,611.85, +30.91 (+0.55%)
NYSE Composite: 19,395.86, +125.56 (+0.65%)