As Wall Street sinks, Trump is his own worst enemy
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[April 03, 2018]
By Noel Randewich
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - As far as the
stock market is concerned, U.S. President Donald Trump is, right now,
his own worst enemy.
The president - who frequently touted Wall Street's rally following his
2016 election victory - was partly blamed for a sharp stock selloff on
Monday that investors believe is likely to continue, deepening cracks in
a nine-year-old bull run.
The selling was sparked by escalating fears of a trade war as China
slapped tariffs on a host of U.S. goods as Trump prepares to impose
tariffs of more than $50 billion on Chinese imports, and by Trump's
renewed criticism of Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>.
"The president's behavior is now beginning to impact the capital markets
- both the averages and individual equities," said Doug Kass, president
of Seabreeze Partners Management in Palm Beach, Florida.
Particularly worrisome to investors on Monday: more weakness in the tech
sector, which led the market up in recent months, and a breach below a
major S&P 500 technical level.
In a Twitter post, Trump attacked Amazon for a second time in three days
over the pricing of its deliveries through the United States Postal
Service and promised unspecified changes.
Amazon's stock slumped 5.2 percent and led the S&P 500 and Nasdaq down,
pressuring other high-growth, technology-related stocks, including
Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O>, Apple Inc <AAPL.O> and Facebook Inc <FB.O>.
Outcry in recent weeks over Facebook's handling of data about its users
has shaken the tech sector with fears of greater governmental oversight.
"(One) big factor is Trump further going after the tech sector, namely
Amazon," said Tom di Galoma, managing director at Seaport Global
Holdings in New York. "It casts a shadow effectively around all of the
tech sector."
TECH SECTOR PAIN = MARKET PAIN
The selloff in technology-related stocks was seen as a particularly
worrisome sign for investors who have banked on that sector continuing
to drive the broader market.
"It's very significant," said Michael Purves, chief global strategist at
Weeden & Co in New York. "Selling tech is not a sector rotation story,
its a sell-the-market story."
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U.S. President Donald Trump arrives at Palm Beach International
Airport, Florida, U.S. for the Easter weekend at Mar-a-Lago in Palm
Beach March 29, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
Technology stocks have been widely viewed in recent months as a "crowded
trade" - with most investors having the same opinion, increasing the
potential for a volatile selloff if sentiment changes.
"What we've learned over the past two weeks is just how overweight
investors were in technology," said Nicholas Colas, co-founder of
Datatrek Research, New York.
Investors saw more selling pressure ahead, particularly after the S&P
500 <.SPX> dipped below a major technical level, the 200-day moving
average, for the first time since Britain voted to leave the European
Union in June 2016. The index closed at 2,582, for a year-to-date
decline of 3.4 percent.
"We have been pounding on the 200-day for the last six sessions and now
we've broken through," said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading
and derivatives for Charles Schwab in Austin, Texas. There may be
support around the 2,537 level, he said, "but then below that we may be
looking at 2,500 or so again, which is pretty scary."
In Trump's first year as president, the S&P 500 surged 24 percent on
bets he would boost the economy with fiscal spending, deregulation and
deep tax cuts. Trump tweeted frequently about the stock market as it
rallied through 2017. But since a selloff in February, he has been
noticeably silent.
But this bull market has frequently staged swift recoveries, and some
were poised for opportunity.
"I'm taking advantage of these markets and am heavily overweighted
financials and banks," said David Kotok, chairman and chief investment
officer Of Cumberland Advisors in Sarasota, Florida. "I didn't buy
today, we're in freefall, but I might tomorrow."
(Reporting by Noel Randewich; additional reporting by Kate Duguid, Karen
Brettell, Jennifer Ablan and Megan Davies in New York; editing by Megan
Davies and Leslie Adler)
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