Trump tariffs wipe out $2 trillion from US stock market
The damage was heaviest in companies whose supply chains are most dependent on overseas manufacturing. Apple Inc., which makes the majority of its US-sold devices in China, fell as much as 9.5%. Lululemon Athletica Inc. and Nike Inc., among companies with manufacturing ties to Vietnam, were both down more than 12%. Target Corp. and Dollar Tree Inc., retailers whose stores are filled with products sourced outside of the US, were trading lower by more than 10%.
Few stocks in the US were unscathed with the benchmark index on pace for its biggest decline since 2022. More than 80% of companies in the S&P 500 were trading lower at 10:20 a.m. in New York, with nearly two-thirds of its 500 stocks down at least 2%.
“There’s really not anybody getting spared in absolute terms,” said Garrett Melson, a portfolio strategist at Natixis Investment Managers Solutions. “You’re just wrapped up, today at least, in a broad de-risking, and so it’s kind of just across the board taking chips off the table.”
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The breadth and severity of the levies dwarfed those imposed by Trump during his first term, threatening to upend global supply chains, exacerbate an economic slowdown and boost inflation. It also left investors struggling to game out what levies would do to corporate profits.
If Apple, for example, were to absorb the jump in costs as a result of tariffs on China, the iPhone maker’s gross margin could take a hit of as much as 9%, said Citigroup analysts led by Atif Malik.
The plan is equivalent to the largest tax