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Wall Street dragged down by Trump trade tweet

Published 08/01/2019, 04:27 PM
Updated 08/01/2019, 04:41 PM
Wall Street dragged down by Trump trade tweet

By Stephen Culp

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street fell again on Thursday, abruptly reversing early gains after U.S. President Donald Trump put concerns about the U.S.-China trade war back in the spotlight, tweeting that he would impose an additional 10% tariff on $300 billion in Chinese imports.

Having spent most of the session on track for their best day since June, all three major U.S. stock indices took sudden U-turns as investors quickly turned into sellers after the tweet.

The bond market rallied on Trump's comment, prompting U.S. Treasury yields into their steepest drop in over a year. The benchmark 10-year yield fell to its lowest level since November 2016.

The CBOE Volatility Index, a gauge of investor anxiety, shot to its highest reading since June 4.

"The biggest issue for investors to realize is that this is systemic and is going to be an ongoing issue between the U.S. and China," said Joseph Quinlan, head of chief investment office market strategy for Merrill and Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Private Bank in New York.

"The markets don't like uncertainty and this is a bolt from the blue in terms of uncertainty."

The sell-off comes on the heels of the U.S. Federal Reserve's first interest rate cut in a decade, and remarks from Fed chief Jerome Powell that tempered expectations for further cuts this year, cuts Trump has been vocal about supporting.

"It looks like the president is bullying the chairman of the Federal Reserve in order to wage his trade war," said Michael O'Rourke, chief market strategist at Jonestrading in Greenwich, Connecticut. "The market should not appreciate that."

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Earlier in the session, Wall Street got a boost from a string of positive earnings from a wide range of companies, including General Motors Co (NYSE:GM), Kellogg Co, Verizon Communications Inc (NYSE:VZ) and Yum Brands Inc, among others.

In economic news, the U.S. manufacturing sector expanded in July at its slowest pace in almost three years, according to the Institute for Supply Management's purchasing manager index (PMI).

Investors now look to Friday's release of the Labor Department's closely-watched jobs report.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 280.85 points, or 1.05%, to 26,583.42, the S&P 500 lost 26.82 points, or 0.90%, to 2,953.56 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 64.30 points, or 0.79%, to 8,111.12.

Of the 11 major sectors in the S&P 500, eight closed in negative territory, with financials, energy and trade-sensitive industrials seeing the biggest percentage losses.

Second-quarter earnings season continues at full throttle, with 355 of S&P 500 companies having reported. Of those, 74.4% have bested Street estimates, according to Refinitiv data.

Analysts now see S&P 500 earnings growth of 2.5%, up from just 0.3% a month ago, per Refinitiv.

Pick-up trucks and SUVs drove General Motors' second-quarter profit beat, but the automaker's stock turned negative after the Trump tweet, ending the session down 0.5%.

Kellogg surged 9.3% as higher North American demand helped the packaged food company beat second-quarter estimates.

Shares of Yum Brands Inc jumped 3.9% after beating analyst profit and sales expectations on better-than-expected growth at all its restaurant chains, which include Taco Bell and Pizza Hut.

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Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 1.87-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.23-to-1 ratio favored decliners.

The S&P 500 posted 28 new 52-week highs and 11 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 76 new highs and 136 new lows.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 9.89 billion shares, compared with the 6.48 billion average over the last 20 trading days.

Latest comments

Chop goes the weasel! Forcing Powell’s hand.
Jack, Just by looking at the time of your post, you’re sure in China, you CCP troll, hope you enjoy the 2-3% market plunge
no matter how beautiful you said, I bet you care your wallet more than the other country, so don't waste time in defame others, protect your wallet instead
Well, just by looking at the time of your post, you’re sure in China, you CCP troll
you misjudged already, but I respect your right of speech, I won't label you.
Have some principle and guts America, look at what the Chinese cheap junk have done to us, ween them off c’ommon
do what? you eat food, and scold the cook
china doesn't care about tariff their government loose nothing.
Of coursr, an authoritarian country cares nothing else other than their power
Trump cares you?
He are send by SATAN to cause hardship to human kind. Now become public Enemy nos. 1....
nothing affects China. Chinese export products can send to third counry and use third country export system to enter US market that will avoid addition tariffs. it is not as Trump think all in China's US companies will move back to US. US can add all Chinese products tariff around 500 billion but China's retaliate will be more serious than it
We should just get rid of the Fed. Looks like the president can lower rate all by himself.
Actually this article already highlighted earlier. you guys keep criticize the article
Trump's Tweeter should be shut down
urs needs to be, u are afraid...that's a sign of an amateur investor. try a money market account if stocks frighten u
Tramp plays yoyo and he plays it well
Tarriff man screws us again
Omg
Adding $3Tril to the debt no problem. Next year all that's borrowed will be just for interest.
No reason for the market to sell off yesterday and today was just a follow up...Manipulators making tons of money
very good reason for the sell off.. markets are highly overvalued.. 20% drop coming
Debt that all you need to know not Trump
MAGA
HIGHER? Update!
This is the beginning of a big correction coming. Second half, the US companies have no choice but to pass the tarriffs off to consumers. Then we will have a big slow down and enter into a recession.
Your thesis is so far off track your account will fall off a cliff
what happend?
Trump adding new tariffs on China.
I honestly hope this starts the market correction. 20% drop is ideal. My fear is the computer algorithms will do a massive sell off to the tune of 40%-50%. corporate buy backs could turn into corporate sell offs.
LOL.  article already obsolete.
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