Wall Avenue professionals weigh in on market sell-off beneath Trump’s tariff conflict


It has been a brutal begin to March as markets reverse their Trump-driven euphoria following the president’s latest tariff conflict escalation and fears over slower financial development within the face of cussed inflation.

Each the benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) have every erased their post-election good points, with the latter getting into correction territory on Thursday after falling 10% from its report closing excessive of 20,173.89 on Dec. 16.

February’s jobs report, launched Friday, supplied some aid with the US financial system including 151,000 jobs, but it surely was nonetheless a brutal week for shares. The S&P 500 capped off its worst week since September.

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“It is an unsure time,” John Stoltzfus, chief funding strategist at Oppenheimer, informed Yahoo Finance in an interview on Wednesday. “However gosh, we had the good monetary disaster, we had COVID-19, we had the availability chain disruptions [coming out of that], and we did remarkably effectively.”

In different phrases, the inventory market has remained resilient within the face of serious disruptions. And regardless of latest sell-off motion, most strategists imagine it’ll keep that manner: Stoltzfus expects the S&P 500 to complete the yr at 7,100, which means about 25% upside primarily based on present buying and selling ranges.

“Chaos creates alternatives,” added Dan Ives, international head of expertise analysis at Wedbush. “[Buying the dip] has been our playbook for many years. The macro scares you and then you definitely look again and say, ‘Why do not I personal the winners? Why do not I personal the dip?'”

However the dip has escalated rapidly.

The S&P (^GSPC) has swung 2% over the previous seven consecutive periods after hitting a report excessive on Feb. 19. In line with knowledge compiled by Yahoo Finance, this was the longest such stretch in intraday strikes for the benchmark index since August 2024 — the final time economists warned of a development scare.

Previous to August, volatility swings of that stage additionally confirmed up in March 2023, across the time of Silicon Valley Financial institution’s collapse.

President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2025. (Win McNamee/Pool Photo via AP)
President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress on the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2025. (Win McNamee/Pool Photograph through AP) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

Given these strikes, some Wall Avenue watchers have mentioned now could be the time to make the most of decrease valuations, with the resiliency image largely nonetheless intact.

“[Tariffs] add uncertainty,” Wedbush’s Ives mentioned. “However for my part it would not change the demand cycle. In different phrases, this isn’t going to finish the tech bull market. It is a scare. However I imagine it is extra alternatives than the time to move for the hills.”

Learn extra: What Trump’s tariffs imply for the financial system and your pockets



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