After President Trump announced plans for $50 billion in tariffs on Chinese imports and the Chinese countered with $50 billion of their own on US goods, Trump upped the ante by calling on his main trade representative to prepare another $200 billion in Chinese goods to be tariffed, should the Chinese actually go through with their retaliation.
As usual, the Dow Jones Industrial Average took the brunt of the day's carnage, shedding more than one percent, while the NASDAQ and S&P showed smaller percentage losses. The decline was the sixth straight for the mighty Dow, which has been under pressure since February of this year and is now even for the year (-19 points).
The other averages have fared better, but 2018 is not shaping up to be a year of excessive profit for equity investors.
Amid the chaos, bond yields continued to fall. The rush to safety is accelerating as the yield curve flattened even more through the day. The spread on the 2s-10s is now just 35 basis points, 5s-30s held steady at 25, 2s-30s are at 48, down one more basis point, the tightening spread making it more and more difficult for financial institutions to generate alpha, or profit, but the herd is heading in one direction and it's toward a recession.
As far as President Trump's intentions are concerned, "the Donald" is perfectly aware of what he's doing. By imposing steep tariffs on foreign goods he will bring most of the planet to its knees and likely cause a recession, though the timing couldn't be more perfect in political terms.
If a recession occurs within the next six to nine months, it would likely be over well before the next presidential race heats up in 2020. Figuring on a recession beginning in January or February of 2019 and running the average of 16 months, the economy would be on the upswing by July or August 2020, giving the president plenty of time to explain how some pain was necessary to restore vibrancy and a level playing field to the US economy.
It's not balderdash. It's the art of the deal.
And thus, with today's losses, more than two thirds of the gains made earlier in the month have been eviscerated.
It's only money.
Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
6/1/18 | 24,635.21 | +219.37 | +219.37 |
6/4/18 | 24,813.69 | +178.48 | +397.85 |
6/5/18 | 24,799.98 | -13.71 | +384.14 |
6/6/18 | 25,146.39 | +346.41 | +730.55 |
6/7/18 | 25,241.41 | +95.02 | +825.57 |
6/8/18 | 25,316.53 | +75.12 | +900.69 |
6/11/18 | 25,322.31 | +5.78 | +906.47 |
6/12/18 | 25,320.73 | -1.58 | +904.89 |
6/13/18 | 25,201.20 | -119.53 | +785.36 |
6/14/18 | 25,175.31 | -25.89 | +759.47 |
6/15/18 | 25,090.48 | -84.83 | +674.64 |
6/18/18 | 24,987.47 | -103.01 | +571.63 |
6/19/18 | 24,700.21 | -287.26 | +284.37 |
At the Close, Tuesday, June 19, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,700.21, -287.26 (-1.15%)
NASDAQ: 7,725.58, -21.44 (-0.28%)
S&P 500: 2,762.57, -11.18 (-0.40%)
NYSE Composite: 12,637.23, -71.40 (-0.56%)
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