Trump’s tariffs have pushed markets to the doorstep of ‘correction territory’ says Wall Street

Wall Street may have initially been happy to see President Trump back in the White House, but less than two months into his second term and the markets are already nearing a dreaded correction .

For a correction to be officially declared, markets must drop 10% from their peak levels. For context, as of yesterday the S&P 500 had dropped a little over 9%.

And with more tariffs—and retaliatory policies—yet to be announced by the White House and foreign governments, analysts are growing increasingly concerned that this downwards spiral will push beyond the correction benchmark.

Already, all of the gains made when Trump won the election have been lost. Initially, markets were buoyed by the end of a period of relative uncertainty as well as the prospect of having a regulation-light figure in the Oval Office.

But rapidly-moving foreign policy has prompted fears over inflation and supply of labor, with the Federal Open Market Committee now hinting it will hold off on any further rate cuts until it has more information .

The cocktail of confusion is enough for markets to lose confidence. At the time of writing the S&P 500 is down 3.62% over the past five days, the Dow Jones down 2.55% and the Nikkei 225 down 2.2% over the same period.

Deutsche Bank economist Jim Reid is buckling in for continued volatility as markets entered "correction territory" yesterday.

In a note seen by Fortune he wrote during the lows of the day markets were "on track to close just over 10% beneath its February peak."

He added: "However, there was a late risk-on move towards the end of the session, as a retreat from some of the more aggressive tariffs and positive headlines on Ukraine helped markets to recover, with the S&P 500 ultimately avoiding a correction and 'only' closing -9.31% beneath its peak.

"But even with that, the latest declines still meant the S&P 500 hit a 6-month low, which is the first time we’ve been able to say that since October 2022."

Devil in the details

US Bancorp points out that the finer details of the market at the moment paint a bleak picture, highlighting 366 of the S&P 500 stocks have already been trading in correction territory . On top of that more than 200 had dipped as far as bear market territory, with a drop of 20% or more from peak levels.

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