New York
CNN
—
US stock futures were falling and stocks in Europe and Asia were mostly lower Wednesday after President Donald Trump’s enormous “reciprocal” tariffs went into effect, upending global trade.
The tariffs, America’s largest in a century, place massive across-the-board import taxes, some as high as 50%, on dozens of nations. China, an extreme outlier, now faces a US tariff of at least 104%. It threatened on Wednesday to retaliate, escalating an already damaging global trade war.
US stock futures fell, set to open lower for the fifth straight session. Dow futures fell 400 points, or 1%. The S&P 500 was down 0.7%. Meanwhile, Nasdaq futures were trading 0.3% lower.
The S&P 500 is on the precipice of bear market territory, coming close to a stunningly rapid drop of 20% from the all-time high it hit just seven weeks ago on February 19. If the US stock market closes in bear market territory, it will end a bull run that has been ongoing since the peak of the inflation crisis in mid-October 2022 – marking the second-fastest decline from a record high to a bear market in the seven-decade history of the S&P 500. Only the Covid pandemic sent stocks into a bear market at a faster clip.
Fear has gripped investors across the world as the tariffs threaten to plunge the global and US economies into a recession this year. Businesses and consumers will end up footing those massive tariff bills, and uncertainty has led to a slowdown in hiring and consumer spending.
Japan’s Nikkei index closed 4% down, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng finished marginally higher. On Monday, the Hang Seng tanked in a 13% rout – the biggest daily decline for the index since the 1997 Asian financial crisis.
South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index headed into bear market territory on Wednesday, a decline of 20% from a recent peak, after the country announced $1.3 billion in emergency support measures for its auto industry as it seeks to mitigate the blow of the Trump administration’s tariffs. The index closed 1.7%, falling about 20% from a peak reached in July 2024.
Markets in Taiwan also fell sharply. But the Shanghai stock market closed more than 1% higher, an outlier in a sea of red Wednesday.
In Europe, the region’s benchmark STOXX 600 index was down 3% at 5.57 a.m. ET. France’s CAC index was down 2.6% and Germany’s DAX 2.8% lower. London’s FTSE 100 index was also trading 2.4% lower by the same time.
Oil tumbles, bonds are acting strangely
Meanwhile, US oil tumbled 4.4% to below $57 a barrel, while the global benchmark Brent crude fell near $60 a barrel — both their lowest levels since February 2021. Oil prices have plunged as investors fear a global recession could sap demand for travel, transportation and shipping – all of which require fuel.
Instead, investors have poured money into some traditional safe-havens, such as gold. Gold spot prices rose 2%.
But, curiously, US Treasury yields have risen in recent days as investors have sold off bonds. The benchmark 10-year yield, which fell below 4% earlier in the week, is now 4.4% — a rise of 0.1 percentage points from Tuesday’s closing yield.
Typically, in times of crisis, investors pour money into longer-term bonds in hopes that the short-term market problems are solved in the long run. But the bond market, like the stock market, has been shaken by extreme volatility in recent days, and some investors are heading for the exits.
Deutsche Bank analysts on Wednesday said the mass exodus from Treasury bonds may signal weakening demand for US-backed assets – traditionally viewed as the gold standard for safety, because it has the backing of the US government.
But in a trade war, investors may be fearful that America could lose its special standing in the world – an opinion echoed by JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon in his shareholder letter earlier this week. And foreign governments negotiating with Trump on trade may threaten to sell off their massive Treasury hoards, hurting America’s ability to borrow money to pay for its significant budget deficit.
“A policy objective of reducing bilateral trade imbalances is functionally equivalent to lowering demand for US assets as well,” said Deutsche Bank analysts said in a note to investors.
Surging volatility
The CBOE volatility index, also known as the “VIX” and Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” surged 8% past 50 — a level the index has only surpassed twice before: During the early stages of the Covid pandemic in March and April 2020 and the 2008-2009 financial crisis that brought on the so-called Great Recession.
The VIX is perhaps the best-known measure of market sentiment. It measures expected price fluctuations or volatility in the S&P 500 Index options over the next 30 days. The VIX often surges on days when the broader market sinks — and rallies when stocks rise. But over time, the VIX tends to be lower in bull markets and higher when the bears are in control.
Bearish sentiment is pervasive across the market lately. CNN’s Fear and Greed Index has pointed solidly to “Extreme Fear” in recent days — nearing the lowest point on its scale. The S&P 500 is close to bear market territory, and the Nasdaq and Russell 2000 are already in a bear.
Volatility works in both directions, and Monday and Tuesday are good examples. The market surged and tanked and bounced in every direction during the day as news — and even some fake news Monday — about Trump’s potential plans for tariffs made its way through Wall Street.
“The US and China are now locked into a trade war without either likely to back down at the moment,” Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown told CNN. “What you’re seeing in investors being extremely skittish which is why (there are) big fluctuations.”
In an afternoon press conference Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said China had missed its deadline to peel back a 34% retaliatory tariff imposed on US goods Friday. So the Trump administration nearly doubled its additional tariff on China Wednesday morning.
That means all Chinese goods coming into the United States will receive a minimum 104% tariff. Many other nations that avoided the so-called reciprocal tariffs – which aren’t really reciprocal – still face a 10% universal tariff that the Trump administration imposed on Saturday.