Markets Bleed Red as Tariff Tensions Fracture Retail Sentiment—Wall Street’s Latest ’Unpredictable’ Shock
Dow, Nasdaq, and S&P 500 all take a hit—because nothing says ’stable economy’ like geopolitical whims dictating your portfolio’s fate.
Retailers can’t agree if tariffs are a death knell or a speed bump. Meanwhile, algorithms trade on panic faster than you can say ’liquidity crunch.’
Bonus jab: Another day, another ’black swan’ event that somehow always manages to surprise the guys charging 2-and-20 for ’risk management.’
Student debt, consumer sentiment rattles Wall Street
The Department of Education under Donald TRUMP has resumed collections on student loans that had been paused for five years. This applies to borrowers in default, who may now face wage garnishment.
Notably, JPMorgan estimated that renewed collections could reduce disposable personal income somewhere between $3.1 billion and $8.5 billion. Bank of America’s analyst Mihir Bhatia noted that low-end consumers will particularly feel the weight of this new policy.
Against this backdrop, May’s preliminary consumer sentiment index has dropped to the second-lowest level on record. The index, which measures consumers’ willingness to spend, fell to 50.8 — the lowest reading aside from June 2022.
Still, despite bad news for Wall Street and Main Street, Bitcoin (BTC) is resilient, trading at $106,323 and up 0.98% in the last 24 hours. Gold showed even stronger performance, up 1.78% to $3,287 per ounce.