Wall Street selloff deepens as Trump sparks recession concerns
FILE PHOTO: Traders work on the floor of the NYSE in New York · Reuters

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NEW YORK (Reuters) -Major U.S. stock indexes sank on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump declined to predict whether his tariff policies could lead to a recession, roiling investor sentiment.

The Nasdaq Composite sank more than 4% after confirming last week that its retreat from December's record high was a correction. The S&P 500 slumped almost 3% in afternoon trading, down about 9% from its all-time high from February 19.

Below are investor and analyst comments about the selloff.

EDWARD AL-HUSSAINY, SENIOR INTEREST RATE AND CURRENCY ANALYST, COLUMBIA THREADNEEDLE INVESTMENTS, NEW YORK

"Has the economy really fallen off a cliff in the last six weeks? No. And yet the perception is dramatically different today than it was at the end of last year."

"If you engineer more downside risk to growth, you don't actually have to do it, but you just engineer the risk, then you're going to bring down your yields. That's not a good way to do it, but that's one way to do it."

"This administration does not know how to define a win. And because we're market participants, we think the 10-year (Treasury) yield going down is going to be their win, but that's nonsense. They don't care about the 10-year yield. They don't care about where the stock market is. Those are not their primary concerns. They are still trying to figure out how to define a win politically, economically, and what is the right timeframe. And until they do that, it's going to be like this every week."

DENNIS DICK, TRADER AT TRIPLE D TRADING, ONTARIO, CANADA

"International investors are coming out of the U.S. markets and they're going elsewhere. Today, it's flying out of everything. You have people unwinding that carry trade. This isn't something that just unwinds in a day or two, you could see this get ugly."

DAN COATSWORTH, INVESTMENT ANALYST, AJ BELL, LONDON

"The U.S. market sell-off is starting to look ugly. Many people have been worried about elevated valuations among U.S. equities for some time and looking for the catalyst for a market correction. A combination of concerns about a trade war, geopolitical tensions and an uncertain economic outlook could be that catalyst."

"Trump was seen as the market’s savior, promising lower taxes and less stringent regulation. Now his actions represent the harbinger of doom. The R word is back on everyone’s lips as people ponder if trade tariffs will backfire and lead to recession rather than U.S. economic prosperity."