Good morning investors. Today weāre covering how the stock market turned red following the presidentās latest move on tariffs, Taiwan Semiās USA investment, and more. First time reading? Join 190,000 self-directed investors gaining an edge every morning. Sign up here.Ā
Monday just delivered the S&P 500ās worst day of the year, and markets have recalibrated for a different reality ā tariffs may not be merely tough talk after all.
Trump confirmed that 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico would take effect Tuesday. Once he confirmed that it was too late to get a deal done, each of the major equity benchmarks tanked, while bitcoin also saw a 9% drop.
Bitcoin, the S&P 500, and the Dow are all hovering below where they traded at before Trump entered office for his second term. The Nasdaq 100 is up 0.22%.
āNo room left for Mexico or for Canada,ā Trump said from the White House.
He also signed into action a fresh 10% levy on China Monday.
It was only a handful of trading sessions ago that traders largely viewed tariffs as a negotiation tactic. A bargaining chip heād discard for concessions.
Trump squashed that perception Monday. The levies are not a bluff.
Now, thereās something to be said about re-shoring manufacturing, production and jobs to the US. As a long term strategy it doesnāt sound outrageous.
But itās not exactly an overnight process either.
More immediate concerns include rising costs for businesses, tighter margins and pressure on earnings ā all of which weighs on both consumers and investors.
Meanwhile, the Atlanta Fedās GDP estimate for the first quarter collapsed from above 2% to nearly -3% within the last several days, underscoring the potential economic hit.
āPresident Trumpās trade proposals are for tariffs to raise tax revenue while also boosting the competitiveness of US made products and to incentivize the re-shoring of manufacturing activity to the US,ā said ING chief international economist James Knightley.
āHowever, the stop-start, will he-wonāt he nature of tariffs is creating uncertainty with manufacturers seemingly concerned about the trading environment they will find themselves in.ā
Veteran strategist Dave Rosenberg, founder of Rosenberg Research, argues that without tariff fears, the Fed would already be cutting interest rates.
āIn the end,ā Rosenberg said, āthe negative macro effects from the global trade war will overwhelm the early inflationary impact, and as we saw in 2019, the longer Powell waits, the more he will eventually need to do.ā
Remember, coming into Trump 2.0 markets rallied on upbeat expectations for deregulation, tax cuts, and a pro-business White House.
The bull market, the thinking went, could handle a little trade war.
Now that the war is on, stocks are in the red.
Comments or feedback? Reply directly to this email or let me know on X @philrosenn.
šUS manufacturing slowed in February. The Institute for Supply Managementās manufacturing PMI registered at 50.3 for the month, down from the 50.9 seen in January and below what economists expected. Separate data showed company costs continued to climb last month. (Yahoo Finance)
šĀ Farming-related stocks tumbled Monday. Thatās another market move tied to Trumpās tariff announcements. The president said farmers should get ready to make a lot of agricultural product āto be sold INSIDER of the United States.ā Shares of Deere, CNH Industrial, FMC< and Corteva dropped. (Barronās)
šŖĀ US weapons aid to Ukraine is slowing. Military financing has been stopped and officials are considering other types of assistance tied to weapons. This follows a tense exchange Friday between Presidents Trump and Zelensky, which led the former to say that the latter should be āmore appreciative.ā (WSJ)
šļøMy conversation with the New York Stock Exchange. I spent an afternoon at the global financial hub to discuss the AI boom and how it relates to the dot-com era, the state of crypto, and building a financial media company. (YouTube)
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Rapid-fire:
Taiwan Semiconductor announced a $100 billion investment in the US, the company announced alongside President Trump (WSJ)
It looks like most US housing markets will see rising active inventory this year (ResiClub)
What Anthony Pompliano thinks about the strategic crypto reserve (Pomp Letter)
Canada is ready to retaliate with counter-tariffs, its foreign minister said Monday (Bloomberg)
Morgan Stanley raised its Tesla price target to $430 (Yahoo Finance)
Last thing:
Marko Kolanovic @markoinny
Why is everybody acting surprised? Trump’s approach to tariffs is exactly same as in 2018. If you were not following markets in 2018 fine, but if you were, there is no excuse for losing money now. Btw Powell’s approach will be the same too.
11:48 PM ⢠Mar 3, 2025
700 Likes 51 Retweets
56 Replies
About me:
š° Iām Phil Rosen, co-founder and editor-in-chief of Opening Bell Daily. Iāve published books, lived on three continents, and won awards for my journalism, which has appeared in Business Insider, Fortune, Yahoo Finance, Bloomberg and Inc. Magazine.
I write our flagship newsletter to prepare you for each trading day, unpacking markets, economic data and Wall Street with analysis you wonāt find anywhere else. Feedback? Write me at phil@openingbellmedia.com, reply directly to this email, or ping me on X @philrosenn.
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