In This Article:
(Bloomberg) -- April gave stock market investors a little bit of everything: Tears as share prices plunged when President Donald Trump started a global trade war, relief as they bounced back when he paused some of his harshest tariffs, and confusion as they rose despite increasing signs of economic turmoil.
Most Read from Bloomberg
-
NJ Transit Urges Commuters to Work Remotely If Union Strikes
-
NYC Lost $9 Billion of Income to Miami, Palm Beach in Five Years
-
New York City Transit System Chips Away at Subway Fare Evasion
-
NYC’s Congestion Toll Raised $159 Million in the First Quarter
Now that the calendar is turning to May, Wall Street simply hopes for some clarity on the Trump administration’s trade policies and Corporate America’s growth expectations. But investors probably shouldn’t hold their breath, as uncertainty appears to be the watchword at this point.
Wednesday’s trading was a prime example of that uneasiness. The S&P 500 Index plunged at the open, quickly falling as much as 2.3% after reports showed the US economy contracted in April for the first time since 2022 and that hiring slowed at US companies. But it clawed back through the day and then burst into the green about five minutes before the close to end the month on a seven-session winning streak.
“This month was like a classic V-shaped roller-coaster,” said Scott Ladner, chief investment officer at Horizon Investments LLC. “We went from very bullish on April 1 to uber-bearish on April 3, and really just one thing changed. From here on the direction of travel needs to be clear.”
Looking at the numbers, the stock market’s swing in April is pretty remarkable. After Trump’s tariff announcement on April 2, the S&P 500 plunged more 12% in four sessions. On April 9, Trump reversed himself, putting a 90-day pause on some of his most onerous levies, which sparked a 9.5% leap, the biggest one-day rally in 17 years. Since then, the market has drifted higher, with the S&P ending the month down less than 1%.
Pain Trade Positioning
But beneath the cautious rebound lurks an uneasy feeling of what’s to come.
“When you look at positioning, it is extremely clear that the ‘pain trade’ from here is still higher,” said Ladner, who describes himself as a “low-conviction bear” at the moment. Looking down the road, however, he sees several potentially bullish catalysts, such as one or multiple trade agreements, a tax cut and possibly a lower overall tariff rate after all the negotiations are done.
Ladner is selling US equities in favor of international exposure right now, but he isn’t moving to cash. And he’s not alone. Inflows into equity funds have continue to be strong, but they’re gravitating away from the US and into the rest of the world, according to data from Deutsche Bank AG on Friday. Positioning by systematic strategies is still very low, while discretionary investors have returned to almost neutral levels.