Wall St Week Ahead-Broadening asset volatility intensifies worries for tariff-tossed US stocks
*
Dollar weakness, spiking Treasury yields rattle investors
*
Earnings in coming week include Goldman, J&J,
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Retail sales on deck, tariff news remains in focus
By
The S&P 500 was set for solid gains on the week after
Trump pulled back on the heftiest tariffs on many countries,
relieving
Investors punished U.S. assets in the wake of Trump's tariffs, with the dollar plunging against other major currencies and benchmark U.S. Treasury yields, which move opposite to bond prices, surging.
The stock market is "very unsettled" as investors weigh how
to price in any economic fallout from the changing tariff
backdrop, said
The market is "kind of trapped by the level of uncertainty that lurks out there," Luschini said. "And therefore investors are largely unwilling to make big bets in one direction or another."
A volatile week in stocks was highlighted by Wednesday's
9.5% jump for the S&P 500, the index's biggest one-day rise
since
The Cboe Volatility index, an options-based measure of investor anxiety, stood at around 40, more than twice its historic median level.
Stock investors were warily watching moves across asset classes, in particular the dollar and Treasuries. An index that measures the dollar against a basket of currencies on Friday fell below 100 for the first time in nearly two years, while the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury was on pace for its biggest weekly jump in decades.
In many prior risk-off events, the dollar and Treasuries
have acted as safe havens, but that has not been the case over
the last week as stocks have tumbled, said
"We are the reserve currency and the risk free asset of the world, and our markets are not acting as such," Todd said.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury on Friday topped 4.5%, which investors have cited as a level that could cause turbulence for stocks. Higher yields translate into higher borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, while potentially making bonds more competitive investments against stocks.
"Until Treasuries stabilize and start to behave normally, risk assets will struggle," Barclays analysts said in a note on Friday.
Quarterly U.S. corporate results in the coming week provide
another test for investors.
"I'm looking for companies that have the competence and the desire to invest through this cycle," VanCronkhite said.
Data on U.S. retail sales for March will shed light on the
health of the consumer, but investors may discount the report to
some extent because it covers a period before Trump's
Markets will remain highly sensitive to developments on the trade front. Investors will hope for evidence of progress between the U.S. and countries for which Trump has paused hefty levies for 90 days.
The faceoff between the U.S. and
"
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