National Post

THE TRUMP TRADE TAKES A TURN

- Sam Forgione

NEW YORK • U.S. and European shares tumbled on Tuesday on concerns that higher interest rates and pro-growth U.S. policies were on hold, boosting safe- haven Treasuries and gold and sending the dollar to a nearly four-month low against the yen.

The U. S. S& P 500 financial sector fell as much as 3.1 percent and posted its biggest daily plunge in about nine months, contributi­ng to the worst daily performanc­e for the benchmark S&P 500 since Oct. 11.

Analysts attributed the selling to reduced confidence that U. S. President Donald Trump’s pro- growth policies, including financial deregulati­on, would occur soon, and to concerns of a dovish Federal Reserve. The Fed stuck to its outlook for two more hikes this year last week, in- stead of the three expected by many market participan­ts.

Investors also saw the Trump administra­tion’s struggles to push through the healthcare legislatio­n overhaul as a sign he may also face setbacks delivering promised corporate tax cuts.

“The market is starting to get a little fed up with the lack of progress in healthcare because everything else is being put on the back burner,” said R. J. Grant, head of trading at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods in New York.

“With the health-care morass, the Trump effect is taking a little bit of a backseat in people’s minds,” said Steve Sosnick, an equity risk manager at Timber Hill, the market-making unit of Greenwich, Connecticu­tbased Interactiv­e Brokers Group. “It feels like the market needs another catalyst.

“The catalysts had been coming largely from the Fed and the Trump effect. Something is spooking people.”

Mark Kepner, managing director at Themis Trading in Chatham, N. J., added, “You have this back and forth in Congress with the new healthcare plan and you have this belief that if the healthcare plan can’t pass, then they can’t move on to taxes. There’s this feeling that if things don’t get done, then maybe what the market has been anticipati­ng gets held up.”

“This is the bloom off the rose,” said Niall Brown, a portfolio manager at Morgan Meighen & Associates. “The market is suddenly realizing maybe things aren’t going to get enacted in as business- friendly a manner as he was hoping. The North American banks certainly took a good ding today as a result.”

Canada’s benchmark stock index also fell on Tuesday. The Toronto Stock Exchange’s S& P/ TSX composite index ended down 129.19 points, or 0.84 per cent, at 15,313.13.

Of the index’s 10 main groups, only the typically defensive telecoms and utilities sectors ended in positive territory, while gold miners also gained as bullion benefited from a weaker U. S. dollar.

The tech-heavy U. S . Nasdaq Composite fell as much as 1.9 per cent after hitting a record intraday high earlier on the back of a rise in Apple shares, which briefly touched a record $ 142.80 a share before falling 1.15 per cent to close at $139.84.

Europe’ s broad FTSEurofir­st 300 stock index also fell after hitting a 15- month high, to close down 0.50 percent at 1,480.99.

Safe- haven gold, the yen and U.S. Treasuries all bene- fited. The dollar hit 111.55 yen, its lowest since Nov. 28, while gold hit a more than two- week high of $ 1,247.60 an ounce and benchmark 10- year U. S. Treasury note yields t ouched a nearly three- week low of 2.419 per cent.

The euro hit $ 1.0819, its highest against the dollar since Feb. 2.

U. S. crude oil prices hit a one- week low of $ 47.23 a barrel as concerns about new supplies overshadow­ed the latest talk by OPEC that it was looking to extend output cuts beyond June.

 ?? JIM WATSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ??
JIM WATSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES

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