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Another Stock Rally Stalls, Casting Doubt on a Quick Rebound from the Trump Tariff Rout


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A broad stock market rally stalled today as investors lost hope for a quick reprieve from the pullback that followed sweeping tariffs announced last week.

The S&P 500 slumped 1.6% on Tuesday after soaring 4% early in the session, while the Nasdaq Composite, up nearly 4.5% in the session's first hour, fell 2.2%. The Dow slid 0.8%.

The S&P 500 shed more than 10% in the final stretch of last week after President Donald Trump announced country-level tariffs that economists warn are likely to raise consumer prices, weigh on profit margins, and slow economic growth. The sell-off was the swiftest in more than 5 years .

Uncertainty remained elevated Tuesday morning, with White House officials saying they’re currently negotiating with more than 50 countries that are slated to be hit with steep tariffs starting Wednesday. Still, stocks rallied in a possible sign that dip buyers were eager to snap up stocks at attractive prices. The S&P 500's price-to-earnings ratio , which stood at nearly 28x earlier this year, had plummeted to nearly 21x by Monday's close, according to analysis by Bespoke Investment Group.

Wall Street's eagerness to buy the dip was evident on Monday when stocks briefly soared as rumors circulated that Trump was considering a 90-day pause. The S&P 500 rose from an intraday low of 4,835 to a high of 5,246, an 8.5% jump that stands as the index's biggest intraday swing since March 2020. The White House later denied the 90-day pause rumor and the rally sputtered.

“I think the potential severity of the negative outcomes is not fully priced into the market, so it makes sense to stay cautious and wait for more information,” wrote Chris Buchbinder, principal investment officer of the Capital Group Dividend Value ETF, in a note on Monday afternoon.

Buchbinder recommends investors evaluate their asset allocations and, “given more than a decade of outsized gains in the U.S.,” diversify their portfolios.

Others saw promising signals in the chaos of last week's rout. “Equities were being sold indiscriminately. Credit spreads widened. Investors were divesting of risk-based assets across the board,” all possible signs of capitulation , wrote Marc Zabicki, Chief Investment Officer at LPL Financial, in a note on Tuesday. (That, the thinking goes, means stocks might not fall much further since most sellers have been shaken out.)

Adam Turnquist, LPL's chief technical strategist, saw signs of capitulation in the Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, which on Monday morning surged above 60 for the first time since August.

“Readings of this magnitude are not only historically rare, but they also often overlap near major capitulation points in market sell-offs,” Turnquist wrote on Monday. The index’s backwardation —in which near-term futures become more costly than long-term futures, despite the greater risk inherent in long-term contracts—was also a sign of panic selling, which often presages a rebound.

The severity of last week's tariffs , and Trump's history of delaying and scaling back tariff threats, gave some analysts confidence that final tariff rates will ultimately be lower than what Trump outlined.

“We believe that many of the announced tariffs last week will be negotiated down. Meaning the fundamentals of this market and economy, when the dust settles, may be better than what is currently being reflected in asset prices,” wrote Zabicki.

Buchbinder remained cautious. While the White House has touted ongoing negotiations that could yield lower tariff rates, he wrote, “the grandeur with which this policy was announced makes it seem unlikely that a meaningful portion of it gets reversed quickly."

Update—April 8, 2025: This story has been updated with index levels as of the market close Tuesday.

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