Yesterday’s stock market selloff hammered home the message that Donald Trump is serious about upending the global trading system — and it appears, at least for now, that fears of a market crash won’t stop him. The plunge hit all corners of the market, even sectors that aren’t directly affected by tariffs, as fears about a recession triggered by the trade regime spooked traders. Financials are a good example: The KBW Bank Index notched its biggest slide since the March 2023 regional banking crisis. Another potential recession signal: Transportation stocks, seen as an economic bellwether, entered a bear market yesterday. Corporate bonds, too, got whacked, with US junk bonds leading the biggest slump in global high-yield debt since 2020. It all raises the stakes for Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who already faces the difficult task of balancing a slowdown in the US against the risk of another surge in inflation. It also comes as the Trump administration moves to slash spending and eliminate tens of thousands of federal jobs under the direction of Elon Musk’s DOGE team, fanning fears about a potential rise in unemployment. “The tariffs are really bad for US and global growth, but it also adds to inflation risk,” said Tracy Chen, a portfolio manager at Brandywine Global Investment Management. “I don’t think the Fed can cut now with all this uncertainty.” Wall Street has been quick to react: UBS Global Wealth Management downgraded US equities, slashing its year-end target for the S&P 500 to 5,800 from 6,400 due to lower earnings estimates and valuation. The new forecast still implies a 7.5% gain from yesterday’s close. —Liz Capo McCormick, Carmen Reinicke, Julien Ponthus and Esha Dey |