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In the Wake of the Trump Tariff Crash: 2 Unparalleled Dividend Stocks to Buy at a Discount Right Now

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Every so often, Wall Street offers a reminder to investors that, despite popular belief, stocks don't rise in a straight line. Although the annualized return of stocks over the last century trumps all other asset classes, corrections, bear markets, and even crashes are normal, healthy, and inevitable.

Over the last two months, the flagship Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI), benchmark S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), and growth-centric Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC) have all slid by a double-digit percentage. The Dow and S&P 500 have officially entered correction territory, while the Nasdaq Composite has fallen into a bear market, with a loss exceeding 20% from its all-time closing high.

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But it's not just the magnitude of these declines that stands out -- it's also the recent velocity of these drops. Since April 2nd, the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite have all logged some of their steepest single-session point and percentage declines on record. For instance, the S&P 500 logged its fifth largest two-day percentage decline in history from the close of April 2 to the close on April 4, which is what qualified this move lower as a crash (even though we're no longer in an ongoing crash).

Donald Trump discussing auto tariffs while seated at a desk in the Oval Office.
President Donald Trump discussing auto tariffs with reporters. Image source: Official White House Photo.

President Trump's tariff policy removed Wall Street's safety net

While a confluence of factors has worked to whipsaw equities and push them rapidly lower in recent weeks, such as the historical priciness of stocks entering 2025, nothing has been more pivotal in pulling the rug out from under the stock market than President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff announcements.

Following the closing bell on April 2, Trump outlined his tariff policy, which includes a 10% sweeping global tariff, as well as the introduction of higher reciprocal tariffs on nations that have historically run negative trade balances with the U.S.

Keeping in mind that President Trump implemented a 90-day pause on these higher reciprocal tariffs for all countries, save China, on April 9, there remains a wall of worry concerning the use of tariffs.

To begin with, there's the possibility of tariffs making domestic goods pricier and reigniting the prevailing rate of inflation. Trump's tariff announcements make little differentiation between output and input tariffs. Whereas the former are duties placed on finished goods, the latter represent an added tax on a component used to complete a finished product in the U.S. Input tariffs run the risk of making domestic products less price-competitive.