Just weeks into President Donald Trump’s second term, the S&P 500 — which had risen over 20% in the previous two years — rocketed to record highs, driven up in part by a substantive increase in corporate earnings as well as the “Trump bump.”
After marking its all-time high of 6,144.15 on Feb. 19, the index soon began to slide, prompting anxiety among some investors and doom-saying from various analysts, especially over the potential impact of the president’s tariff proposals.
For instance, Andrew Brenner, head of international fixed income at National Alliance Securities, told the New York Times a month ahead of Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcements, “The tariff rhetoric has become daily and extreme, sentiment is awful and trading is on edge.”
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