Good morning! Turns out the trade war really does come down to US-China negotiations. More reporting below. Was this email forwarded to you? Join 190,000 self-directed investors and sign up here.Â
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Stocks in the âLiberation Dayâ era seem to make history every other trading session.
On Wednesday:
S&P 500 climbed 9.5% for its best one-day gain since 2008
Nasdaq Composite surged 12.16%, the most since 2001 and second-biggest leap ever
Dow Jones Industrial Average added nearly 8% for its best advance since March 2020
The rally followed President Trumpâs announcement on Truth Social that he would pause some of his global “reciprocalâ tariffs for 90 days, capping tariffs for most nations at 10%.
In the same post, the president said he would raise tariffs on China to 125%
âAt some point, hopefully in the near future, China will realize that the days of ripping off the U.S.A, and other Countries, is no longer sustainable or acceptable,â Trump wrote, reinforcing the suspicions of many that his tariff agenda is primarily targeted at Beijing.
Since the Wednesday âLiberation Dayâ press conference, volatility and all, the S&P 500 is down 2.8% â effectively a rounding error in the seemingly dire barrage of headlines.Â
To Gene Goldman, chief investment officer for Cetera Investment Management, the market reaction signaled a sudden surge in risk appetite, noting that growth stocks outperformed value, while cyclical sectors outpaced more defensive ones.
âThe Trump administration was able to resist the equity market sell-off for some time, however, once the bond market fell â yields rose â it was a clear signal that financial markets were under too much stress,â Goldman told me.
Now, to the concern of some market-watchers, President Trump published an oddly timed Truth Social post three hours before his tariff delay.
Given the timing and subsequent historic rally, it makes sense to reconsider those words with suspicion.
Even if we give Trump the benefit of the doubt, it doesnât make it any better that the leader of the worldâs largest economy is teetering along lines of market manipulation.
And yet markets, in any case, did not seem to mind.
Following the big announcement, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested at a press conference that China shouldnât have retaliated to the initial salvo of tariffs.
âYou might say he goaded China into a bad position,â Bessent said. âThey have shown themselves to be the bad actors and we are willing to cooperate with our allies and trading partners that didnât retaliate.â
Indeed, after the news, economists at Goldman Sachs walked back their earlier recession forecast, and a number of strategists and executives across Wall Street responded with optimism.
Consumer confidence has slumped in recent months (Chart: Exhibit A)
But what happens after 90 days? Chris Marangi, co-investment chief at Gabelli Funds, said it will still be difficult to roll the clock back from this point.
âThe odds of a recession are probably lower this afternoon than [Wednesday] morning, but theyâre certainly higher than they were a week ago,â Marangi said.
Investor confidence and the predictability of policy, in his view, is still on shaky ground.
âThe Trump put actually might have been triggered by what happened to the bond market,â Marangi added. âThis is not over by any stretch, itâs a pause, and weâre going to go through another three months of negotiations and rhetoric.â
đ˘ď¸Â Oil prices are creeping higher. Benchmark US crude hovered near $64 a barrel late Wednesday, up from the day priorâs $59.58. President Trumpâs China tariffs puts oil demand at risk, according to some strategists, and thatâs led many banks to cut their oil outlooks for the year. (WSJ)
đ¤Â Howard Lutnick says negotiations are coming. The Commerce Secretary said in an interview with Fox News that trade deals with countries wonât happen right away, but they are on the way: âWe are going to cover a lot of ground in the next 90 days.â (WSJ)
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Rapid-fire:
Japanâs benchmark Nikkei 225 surged in early trading Thursday (AP)
Apple stock notched its best day since 1998 (CNBC)
The White House clarified that Canada and Mexico will not get extra 10% tariffs (Reuters)
Copper prices are ticking back up though risks are mounting due to Chinaâs tariffs (WSJ)
Jamie Dimon had said early Wednesday that a recession is a âlikely outcomeâ from the earlier iteration of tariffs (CNBC)
China and the EU will discuss trade and resume EV talks, Chinese officials said (Reuters)
Last thing:
Ben Calusinski @BCalusinski
Most of you weren’t around for this
But last time Trump said “This is a great time to buy” was Christmas day of 2018
That was the exact low of the -20% correction in 2018 and was followed by a huge rally into 2020
7:23 PM ⢠Apr 9, 2025
285 Likes 52 Retweets
44 Replies
About me:
đ° Iâm Phil Rosen, co-founder and editor-in-chief of Opening Bell Daily. Iâve 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.
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