Trump may not care about the stock market anymore

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The Wall Street perma bulls were taught a tough new lesson in May: Don’t expect stock market fanboy President Donald Trump to always save you with a bullish tweet when equity values lose a few percentage points.

These always sunny, brilliant Wall Street minds should keep what they learned from a challenging May for the markets close to their heart this summer. That’s this is a president that looks dead-set on winning a trade war with China (and now Mexico and potentially, Australia...), and may be inclined to let stocks dip further despite his nature to try and boost stock prices with tweets and grand policy pronouncements.

“So many people seem to believe that President Trump will come-out and try to jawbone (or tweet) the market higher whenever it dips to ANY degree. His words and actions over the past week... during a market decline... throws a lot of doubt on that theory,” says Miller Tabak strategist Matt Maley.

You have been warned.

Trump has tweeted about the market quite a bit during his presidency. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)
Trump has tweeted about the market quite a bit during his presidency. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)

Markets enter June on a down note

Trump didn’t tweet once about the swooning stock market in May. Actually his last tweet on stocks came on April 23, when he shouted out the market nearing a record high.

Since then, Trump has ratcheted up the trade war rhetoric with China. Meanwhile, China has begun to return fire after seemingly plotting its plan of attack on the trade front for much of May.

Not content with fresh tariffs on China, the self described “tariff man” said he would levy a 5% tariff on all goods from Mexico on June 10 unless the country gets the migrant crisis under control. Tariff rates would gradually increase from there to 25% by October 1 barring a resolution.

“The market was blindsided by this — this is not good for the markets,” Tom Essaye, president of Sevens Report Research, said on Yahoo Finance’s The First Trade.

Indeed the market enters June with a clear bias to the downside.

The S&P 500 is coming off its worst month of the year, falling 6.5% in May. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has notched six straight weekly losses, the worst stretch since 2011. Global economic bellwethers Amazon and Apple — two U.S. companies caught in the middle of the trade war with China — fell 14.7% and 7%, respectively, last month.

The risk of backdrop for stocks sent investors piling into Treasuries — the 10-year yield declined to 2.15% in May from 2.5% at the start of the month.

Traders return to their desks on Monday looking at calls for a recession within a year from Morgan Stanley and another leg lower in the 10-year yield.

Yet, in spite of the negative news, Trump has stayed mum on stocks. It’s pretty remarkable to see him not try to pump up the souring markets. Trump has not hidden his view that the stock market is one of the most important benchmarks on the success of his presidency. Further, the president feverishly dines on cable news’ coverage of the markets, which have been anything but upbeat of late.