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As Trump's stock market gains shrink, he says it will 'work out fine'

Published 03/12/2020, 05:02 PM
Updated 03/12/2020, 05:02 PM
© Reuters. A trader talks on the phone while working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York

By Noel Randewich and Steve Holland

(Reuters) - For three years, U.S. President Donald Trump has touted a stunning run-up in the stock market as evidence of his success in the White House. In the space of three weeks, most of those gains have evaporated.

As the coronavirus pandemic spreads fear of a recession, the stock market's rise under the Republican president, a major part of his case for reelection in November, is now less than half of the gain of his predecessor and rival Barack Obama at the same point in his presidency.

At its peak on Feb. 19, the S&P 500 (SPX) was up 58% from when Trump unexpectedly beat Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in November 2016. As of Thursday, Trump's stock market was up just 17%. The S&P 500 gained 41% in same number of days after Obama was elected president in 2008.

Measuring from Trump's inauguration on Jan 20, 2017, the S&P 500 is now up less than 10%, compared to a gain of 70% under Obama during the same span of his first term.

(Graphic: The Trump Slump - https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/13/3342/3303/Trump%20Slump.png)

Trump, who has repeatedly boasted on Twitter and to reporters of the stock market's performance in recent years, on Thursday played down the carnage wracking Wall Street.

"We have a lot of things that we're working on with the financial markets, and it's going to work out fine," Trump told reporters.

"You have to remember the stock market, as an example, is still much higher than when I got here. And it's taken a big hit, but it's going to all bounce back, and it's going to bounce back very big at the right time."

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) tumbled nearly 10% on Thursday, its worst day since 1987 after Trump announced a sweeping move to restrict travel from Europe. S&P 500 futures tumbled late on Wednesday, seconds after he announced the travel ban in a televised address.

As fears grew that Washington has not done enough to prepare for the growing pandemic, the S&P 500 on Thursday sank another 9.5% in a dramatic end to a bull market that started during Obama's presidency in the aftermath of the financial crisis, and that lasted 11 years.

In the early months of Trump's first term, Wall Street, led by banks, surged on expectations that Republicans would slash regulations, a promise Trump fulfilled. Later gains were driven by historic tax cuts that freed up money for companies to spend on dividends and stock buybacks, which reached record levels.

© Reuters. A trader talks on the phone while working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York

As of Monday, the recent sell-off had cost the average person in the United States about $16,000, mostly through retirement plans and not accounting for wealth disparities, according to a study.

Latest comments

Trump is insecure, and a rising stock market, and touting it as his doing was proof of that.  He did make the mistake of cutting taxes when they were not really needed--just adding more air to the bubble--that is near certain.  I want him to now stand up and say that the stock market should really make no difference to politics and that rationality in markets needs to prevail.  And then he needs to admit to himself and everyone that he was wrong in trying to take credit for a rising market.  Then he will earn my respect, but not before that.
Pick sides much investing?
“Its going to bounce back, very big at the right time” thats a clear sign the markets will get pumped out of this world.
Republican = Recession
Typical GOP+
democrat =defame, deny & disgrace
Holee Toleedo, hey, you know what that little plus sign stands for?
Anyone else who misses the smartness of Obama to handle crisisses? I do!!
More Bile Jan
Yes, There should be criteria. I.d think those genes shouldn't be passed on to future generations. Same for that Thom Miller character .
like how 62 million Americans contracted H1N1.. Didn't get the type of backlash as Pres Trump is getting bc it isn't anyone fault.
But... but... I thought this was Obama's economy, as stated not 3 weeks ago.
What part of it is Obama's economy and if he were still here this would never have happened, isn't obvious to you.
yes, even the big "O" himself made an attempt to take this tp his "Shovel ready jobs" like Fuzzy Joe does...
bro, I think the man was voicing sarcasm. Il be surprised if i'm wrong
apples to oranges. Obama inherited an economy that was at the bottom... nowhere to go but up. Trump took office at the tail end of the longest upward moving economy in recent history.
But he tried to take all the credit lol!
Obama took over after GW failed our economy. Now another Dem will have to clean up another republican mess
Boooo. You ain't too bright but that figures for a lefty
As long as you haven't sold the bottom, you haven't lost anything.
Exactly
100% correct!
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