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    Home » S&P 500 loses over 3 trillion dollars under Trump administration
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    S&P 500 loses over 3 trillion dollars under Trump administration

    May 1, 2025
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    The U.S. stock market has experienced significant volatility during the early months of President Donald Trump’s second term, recording one of the weakest openings to a presidency in modern history. Since his inauguration in January 2025, the S&P 500 has declined over 15%, a performance worse than any new administration since the George W. Bush era during the early 2000s market downturn. President Trump has alternated between attributing the market’s performance to his influence and distancing himself from recent declines.

    S&P 500 loses over 3 trillion dollars under Trump administration

    In January 2024, before taking office, Trump described market gains as a result of investor confidence in his likely return to power. However, after the market began to slide in 2025, he stated that current losses were the responsibility of the previous administration, asserting that the economic damage was inherited and unrelated to his policies. Historically, financial markets respond to a wide range of variables, including interest rate expectations, geopolitical developments, corporate earnings, and fiscal policies. Nonetheless, the stock market in 2025 has shown a pattern of reacting directly to White House policy shifts.

    Following Trump’s rollout of a broad tariff strategy early in his second term, the S&P 500 registered its lowest point of the year on April 8. While the index has partially recovered since then, it remains in negative territory compared to its pre-inauguration level. The administration’s unpredictable messaging has contributed to investor uncertainty. Announcements hinting at increased tariffs, potential changes at the Federal Reserve, and sudden policy shifts have led to sharp swings in market sentiment. For example, markets dropped when Trump suggested he might remove Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, only to rebound after he reversed the statement days later.

    In terms of investor impact, the decline in equity values has erased more than $3.6 trillion in market capitalization from the  S&P 500 since Trump returned to office. This has implications beyond Wall Street. With over 60% of American adults owning stocks directly or through retirement plans, the downturn affects a broad swath of the population, from individual investors to institutional funds. Trump remains publicly optimistic, predicting that his trade policies will eventually spur domestic manufacturing and economic growth. He has argued that the downturn is temporary and that structural improvements will follow as tariffs take effect and companies relocate operations to the U.S.

    However, the anticipated economic boom has yet to materialize. In contrast to his first term, when markets rose by approximately 5% in the first 100 days, Trump’s second term has so far seen a 7% drop over the same period. This shift reflects declining investor confidence amid rising economic uncertainty. Analysts note that the administration’s early months have been marked more by turbulence than by the stable conditions many expected following Trump’s re-election. The outlook remains uncertain as markets continue to respond to policy developments from Washington. – By MENA Newswire News Desk.

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