Market Heads South (Of The Border) As Trump Threatens Mexico With Tariffs

 | May 31, 2019 01:46PM ET

(Friday Market Open) You may have heard of the Wall Street adage “sell in May and go away.” As the last trading session of this month gets underway, it seems clear that at least the first part of that has come true.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX) had already lost more than 5% over the month through Thursday’s close, and things aren’t looking great for the bulls in early going today.

The latest headwind for the market? You guessed it: Fresh trade worries. But this time the big news wasn’t about U.S.-China trade relations.

In a big surprise, President Trump late Thursday threatened to impose a 5% tariff on all goods from Mexico, starting on June 10. He said that the tax would gradually increase “until the illegal immigration problem is remedied, at which time the tariffs will be removed.”

The news sent shares of General Motors (NYSE:GM), Ford (NYSE:F) and Fiat Chrysler (NYSE:FCAU) tumbling in pre-market trading as they import vehicles and parts from Mexico. And Treasury yields fell as investors flocked to the relative safety of U.S. government debt.

Meanwhile crude futures were under pressure amid concerns about demand amid increased U.S. and Saudi production.

h3 Tariff Exhaustion/h3

Trump’s announcement on Mexico tariffs comes at a time when the market has already been under tariff-related pressure concerning China. There’s no end in sight to the U.S.-China trade war and many market participants seem to have reached a point of exhaustion with the China tariff situation.

For months, there’s been an almost daily back-and-forth where the market rises strongly one session when there has been optimistic news on the trade front, only to have those hopes dashed and stocks retreat in another session based on fresh commentary from U.S. or Chinese trade negotiators.

That indecision, over a prolonged period, seems to have led investors to move out of equities and into U.S. government debt, even before the Mexico announcement. Perhaps that’s because they registered decent stock market gains earlier in the year, and now may want to take some profits and wait out the stormy trade winds.

h3 Where’s The Bargain Hunting?/h3

One thing that’s worrisome at the moment is that it doesn’t seem like much bottom fishing, or bargain hunting, has been going on. There doesn’t seem to be a sector that, when stocks in it reach a certain low, people come in to buy, like we’ve seen with chipmakers and FAANG stocks in the past.

On Thursday, the market took a bit of a break from the selling but didn’t push convincingly higher, as stocks managed to eke out slight gains, perhaps as investors wanted to reassess whether the recent selling had brought valuations down to a level that matches the currently low appetite for risk.

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On that front, longer-term bond yields fell as investors continued to buy Treasuries because of the relative safety of stable U.S.-government-backed debt. Meanwhile, the yield on the three-month Treasury was higher than that of the 10-year Treasury, a so-called inversion that is also in place this morning. Some economists say an inverted yield curve is sometimes the sign of a pending recession, though others say the relationship isn’t necessarily an accurate prediction.