Whatās going on here? Tariffs were meant to be as supportive of the US economy as baseball games and Central Park glizzies ā but after stateside stock markets tanked, the president hit pause on Wednesday. What does this mean? Investorsā screen time will have been ludicrous lately ā and not due to TikTok rabbit holes or family group chat drama, but because US tariffs create a headline a minute. With traders anxious over tit-for-tat taxes between China and the US, the Russell 2000 ā an indicator of US economic growth ā was reflecting a 79% probability of a recession early on Wednesday. The S&P 500 and prices of base metals (essential materials for tons of industries) suggested similar. Then, in a surprising one-eighty, the US president announced a 90-day pause on tariffs for countries that havenāt retaliated. That got rid of investorsā pessimism: they initially lit a fire under US stocks. Why should I care? For markets: Now scram! Investors werenāt just concerned that tariffs would raise prices and fracture international relationships. Theyāre also not confident that the powers that be have a concrete plan ā and if thereās one thing investors hate, itās uncertainty. So theyāve been scrambling in different directions, cartoon-style. Institutions are switching to protective investments: cash, Treasury bonds, and put options. Retail investors, on the other hand, are taking more risks. For you personally: Thanks a lot, Reddit. The ābuy the dipā mantra has long been drummed into retail investorsā heads. So you can see why theyāve been buying stocks the second they seem to be recovering, only to see their early wins wiped out within hours. And with the pulls and pushes strong enough to change portfolio balances by tens of thousands in minutes, even seasoned traders are becoming cautious. The temptation to ābuy the fearā still exists ā but you need a stomach of steel to wait for that strategy to pay off, especially as a lasting recovery would likely hinge on lasting policy changes. |