Wall St Week Ahead: Broadening asset volatility intensifies worries for tariff-tossed US stocks
NEW YORK: Wild swings in global markets are poised to keep U.S. stock investors on edge in the coming week, as a weakening dollar and a selloff in Treasuries compound extreme equity volatility that erupted after President Donald Trump launched his sweeping tariffs.
The S&P 500 was set for solid gains on the week after Trump pulled back on the heftiest tariffs on many countries, relieving Wall Street's worst-case scenario. Still, the benchmark index still was down about 13% from its February 19 all-time closing high. Concerns about lasting economic damage remained as the U.S. and China ratcheted up their trade battle and questions lingered over levies elsewhere as Trump only paused many of the most severe tariffs.
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 Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott.
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 October 2008 during the heart of the financial crisis.
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 Walter Todd, chief investment officer at Greenwood Capital in South Carolina.
'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. Goldman Sachs, Johnson & Johnson and Netflix are among the major U.S. companies set to report.
Bryant VanCronkhite, senior portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments, said he would be looking for companies which can show confidence in their businesses despite the shifting tariff landscape.
"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 April 2 tariff announcement. A survey on Friday showed U.S. consumer sentiment fell sharply in April and 12-month inflation expectations surged to the highest level since 1981 amid unease over escalating trade tensions.
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 China -- the world's two largest economies -- will also consume attention. Beijing increased its tariffs on U.S. imports to 125% on Friday after Trump's move to hike duties on Chinese goods.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Martechvibe
an hour ago
- Martechvibe
Why Most Businesses Are Still Struggling to Win with AI
AI is everywhere. It's the cornerstone of transformation roadmaps, the centrepiece of boardroom conversations, and increasingly, the north star of enterprise innovation. A recent Qlik study revealed that 86% of senior executives say AI is now central to their organisation's business strategy. Yet, only a small fraction are seeing the meaningful business outcomes they hoped for. A parallel report by Kyndryl paints a similar picture. Despite the enthusiasm, most businesses are still stuck in the early phases of AI maturity. Only 5% of organisations are considered 'AI Pacesetters'— those that successfully use AI at scale and see significant returns. So what's going wrong? The AI Execution Gap Is Real Both reports point to a sobering truth: strategy alone isn't enough. There's a wide and growing gap between AI ambition and AI execution, and it's costing companies time, money, and competitive advantage. 'Organisations clearly recognise that merely investing in AI is insufficient; what matters now is delivering tangible outcomes. Yet, as our research underscores, the road to production AI remains blocked by persistent hurdles—cost, complexity, and data fragmentation,' said Mike Capone, CEO of Qlik. Closing the AI execution gap requires more than aspiration—it demands practical solutions that simplify data integration, ensure governance, and empower better decision-making. This pressure is even more intense with generative AI dominating leadership agendas. The pace of genAI evolution amplifies organisational anxiety and widens the gap between intent and capability. Eric Hanselman, Chief Analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said, 'The fast-evolving GenAI landscape pressures enterprises to move swiftly, sometimes sacrificing caution as they strive to stay competitive. Many are deploying GenAI tools before fully understanding their implications, especially with the surge of SaaS platforms embedding genAI capabilities.' Recent research from S&P, 'The 2025 Thales Data Threat Report' revealed that nearly 70% of organisations consider the fast pace of generative AI development the leading challenge tied to AI adoption, followed by concerns over integrity (64%) and trustworthiness (57%). Enterprises are leveraging AI to accelerate product development, enhance CXs, improve training, speed drug discovery, and optimise operations. However, the rapid adoption of genAI introduces complex challenges that organisations must navigate carefully. The Five Core Blockers Include: 1. Workforce Inertia and Fear Kyndryl found that 71% of leaders believe their workforce isn't ready to adopt AI. 45% say there's active resistance or even fear of job displacement due to AI. 2. Talent and Skills Shortages Over half of the organisations surveyed (51%) admit they lack the necessary AI-skilled talent to scale effectively. Many are not investing fast enough in reskilling or change management. 3. Data Complexity Qlik's report shows most organisations are bogged down by fragmented data systems, legacy infrastructure, and inconsistent governance models. Nearly 80% of respondents say these issues are their biggest barriers to realising AI's full potential. 4. Leadership Disconnects


Khaleej Times
an hour ago
- Khaleej Times
Musk, Trump to hold 'peace call' after feud; Tesla shares rise
Tesla shares rose on Friday as investors took some comfort from White House aides scheduling a call with CEO Elon Musk to broker peace after a public feud with US President Donald Trump. Trump threatened to cut off government contracts to Musk's companies, while Musk suggested Trump should be impeached, turning their relationship into an all-out brawl on social media. The electric carmaker's shares were up around 5 per cent in Frankfurt on Friday, having closed down 14.3 per cent on Thursday in New York, losing about $150 billion in market value. "It's unlikely that Trump will end subsidies and contracts with Tesla. Those are obviously threats that are unlikely to come into fruition," said Fiona Cincotta, senior market analyst at City Index. Stay up to date with the latest news. Follow KT on WhatsApp Channels. "I don't expect this to blow out into anything more serious than a war of words for a couple of days." Analysts said some of Thursday's selloff was down to factors beyond Musk's personal relationship with the president. "We think the stock's sell-off reflects a number of other factors: an unjustified run-up following its Q1 earnings release, ongoing market share losses in China and Europe, and a realisation that next week's Robotaxi launch in Austin could disappoint," Garrett Nelson, senior equity analyst at CFRA Research, said in a note. "We remain at Hold, expecting more volatility in the near term. Buckle up!" he said. Tesla shares, which hit record highs when Trump won the election in November, have since been punished harshly, as Musk's cost-cutting role in the US administration hurt Tesla's image with shareholders and consumers alike. The stock is still considered part of Wall Street's elite "Magnificent 7" club of the seven biggest companies by market cap, even though it has now dropped to ninth position in terms of value, behind Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway and Broadcom. It has also dropped out of the $1-trillion club of companies with market value above this level. The broader stock market got hit on Thursday as the feud between Musk and Trump intensified. By Friday, with signs of a possible truce on the horizon, stock futures turned higher as well, with those on the SP 500 up 0.4 per cent. "Elon Musk has already signalled that he is open to a cooling off period with Trump, and stock market futures are higher on Friday morning. Thus, the risk could be more localised with Tesla shares in the short term," Kathleen Brooks, XTB research director, said.


Dubai Eye
an hour ago
- Dubai Eye
Swiss National Bank denies currency manipulation after being put on US watch list
The Swiss National Bank (SNB) said on Friday it would intervene in foreign currency markets where necessary to keep inflation on track after the US added Switzerland to a list of countries being monitored for unfair currency and trade practices. The SNB denied being a currency manipulator after the publication of the US Treasury Report on Thursday, but said it would continue to act in Switzerland's interests as the strong franc helped push inflation into negative terrain last month. "The SNB does not engage in any manipulation of the Swiss franc," it said. "It does not seek to prevent adjustments in the balance of trade or to gain unfair competitive advantages for the Swiss economy." The SNB said it was in contact with US authorities to explain Switzerland's economic situation and monetary policy, and would continue to use interest rates and forex market interventions if necessary to pursue its inflation target of 0-2 per cent. Swiss inflation hit a four-year low in May, with prices falling by 0.1 per cent. The SNB declined to say whether further talks with the United States were planned, but said its monetary policy was "geared towards the needs of Switzerland". Switzerland met two of the US Treasury's concerns regarding trade flows and its current account, but not on foreign currency interventions. SNB forex exchange purchases in 2024 were "minimal," Treasury said. In 2024, the SNB bought only $1 billion in foreign currencies, equivalent to only 0.1 per cent of Swiss GDP, well below the Treasury's threshold of 2 per cent of economic output. The US has also added Ireland to the list, along with previous countries, including Germany, China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and Vietnam, already being monitored at the time of the November report from the Biden administration.