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‘The World Is Different Now’: Market Convulsions Hit Wall Street

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(Bloomberg) -- All across Wall Street, on the trading desks and in corporate C-suites, among hedge-fund managers and bond dealers, there’s a growing unease that one day soon, Donald Trump might just end up breaking not only the economy, but also key parts of the financial markets.

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After equity markets in Asia and Europe plummeted for a third day, the S&P 500 Index in the US ended the day down just 0.2%, slowing the worst slide since the pandemic hit the US in 2020.

But beneath the surface, anxiety continued to send unusual convulsions through markets, causing benchmarks in stocks and bonds to swing wildly, and often in conflict, between pricing in recession fears to betting the financial toll will force Trump to back down. Shortly before 10 a.m. in New York, stocks started surging, bouncing more than 8% off their lows in a matter of minutes, as rumors swirled on Wall Street trading desks that Trump would delay his tariffs. Stocks gave up the gains just as quickly as the speculation was debunked.

In the bond market, Treasuries traded in ways that defied easy explanations, with yields rising relentlessly through the day. That pushed 10-year yields up nearly 0.2 percentage points to 4.19%, sowing multiple theories — including fears of an overseas buyers’ strike at auctions, concern the federal debt will jump as trade stalls and worrisome signs of dash-for-cash liquidations.

Meantime, investors scoured funding markets for signs of any disruptions on concern big banks and other dealers are at risk of getting hit.

“It’s extraordinarily hard to trade this market. It’s stressful. It’s very messy,” said Julian Brigden, co-founder of Macro Intelligence 2 Partners. “People cannot wrap their heads around the idea that the world is different now.”

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Analysts and investors were quick to downplay any immediate risk to the global financial system, even after global stock losses neared $10 trillion over the past three days. But they pointed to signs of strain — like frozen corporate debt markets and a jump in gauges of default risk — that have piled up as the economic outlook darkened rapidly across the globe.

Raising Alarms