Trump loved celebrating the stock market surge in 2017, but he's been quiet about this year's declines
President Donald Trump has had to grapple with a more volatile stock
market this year, after equities consistently rose during his first year
in office.
The president has stayed silent amid market declines this year,
despite cheering stock price increases as evidence that his policies are
working.
While economic growth is strong, Federal Reserve policy and a
widening trade conflict with China has led to concerns about damage to
the economy.
As stock markets steadily climbed during his first year in office, President Donald Trump cheered the rise at every turn.
But the president has stayed silent as he watched this year's gains disappear in recent days.
Good financial market and economic news greeted Trump after his
inauguration in January 2017. Hopes about his push to slash regulations
and chop corporate tax rates unlocking economic growth helped to drive
stock market records. The president gleefully claimed rising stocks as
evidence of his success.
Now, he has to grapple with an unknown: a stock market that has recently
slipped, partly due to the president's own policies. While gross
domestic product has improved, market watchers appear disappointed with
the prospects for earnings growth. Interest rate hikes from a Federal
Reserve chairman the president appointed — and routinely criticizes —
along with a widening trade war with China have spooked investors.
The recent stock losses may prove short-lived. The market pain has so
far not hurt Trump's approval rating ahead of the critical Nov. 6
midterm elections, though booming equities last year did little to help
Americans' views of the president. Still, the stock struggles at least
temporarily erase one of the factors the president pointed to as
evidence of success throughout his first year.
Stocks surged from Jan. 23, 2017, the first trading day after Trump's
inauguration, until the end of last year. The Dow Jones industrial
average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite climbed about 25 percent, 18
percent and 24 percent, respectively, during that time, according to
FactSet data.
This year has gone much differently for markets. The Dow and S&P
have dipped 0.1 percent and 0.6 percent, respectively, this year. Only
the Nasdaq has stayed positive, rising 3.8 percent.
As of Friday's close, the Dow, S&P and Nasdaq had dropped 6.7
percent, 8.8 percent and 10.9 percent in October, respectively.
In a statement Wednesday, White House spokeswoman Lindsay Walters
shrugged off the stock market troubles, saying "the fundamentals and
future of the U.S. economy remain incredibly strong." She added that "we
remain focused on the long-term outlook of the U.S. economy."
A tale of two different years
The investing community largely had high hopes for what Trump would do
for American businesses during his first year in office. The strong
stock market performance continued a steady climb that started during
the Obama administration, following the 2008 financial crisis.
Stock markets cheered the Trump administration's economic policy despite
comments and actions that mobilized large swaths of the country against
the president. His restrictions on travel for people from several
Muslim-majority countries, the GOP plan to repeal the Affordable Care
Act and his remarks equating white nationalists with protesters
demonstrating against them in Charlottesville, Va., all contributed to a
poor approval rating.
Trump escalates attack on Fed
Trump escalates attack on Fed
11:34 AM ET Wed, 24 Oct 2018 | 01:29
Days after Trump took office, he signed an executive order aiming to
roll back regulations and stop the creation of new rules. He has since
taken various other steps to scale back regulations, which Republicans
and the business community have largely cheered.
Anticipation of tax cuts, and subsequently stronger corporate earnings,
boosted stocks throughout 2017. In December, Republicans passed a plan
to slash tax rates for corporations and pass-through businesses and
temporarily trim rates for most individuals. Trump repeatedly contended
the law would boost job and GDP growth — and help stocks in the process.
The script has flipped this year. Stock markets endured a rough
February, driven in part by an expectation of rising interest rates and
more aggressive Federal Reserve policy.
Shortly after that, Trump started his policy of imposing tariffs on
imports in order to pressure allies into striking new trade deals. He
first put duties on steel and aluminum. Then, Washington and Beijing
began imposing an escalating series of tariffs, with the Trump
administration most recently slapping 10 percent duties on $200 billion
in Chinese goods last month. Those rise to 25 percent at the end of the
year, and Trump is considering another $267 billion in tariffs.
The trade conflict has led to concerns about a widening economic war
that could raise costs for businesses and consumers and damage economic
growth. Trade negotiations between the U.S. and China have stalled. The
Trump administration reportedly wants Beijing to come up with a specific
proposal to stop the alleged theft of intellectual property before
talks start again, which complicates any effort to make progress on
trade.
As markets have reacted poorly to the Fed's three interest rate
increases this year, the president has increasingly lashed out at the
politically independent central bank. In a Wall Street Journal interview
this week, he said he was "very unhappy with the Fed because [President
Barack] Obama had zero interest rates."
Trump added that he "maybe" regrets appointing Fed Chair Jerome Powell to the post.
Trump's top economic advisor, for his part, claimed fears about
Democrats winning a House majority drove the market declines more than
concerns about slowing global economic growth and rising interest rates.
On Tuesday, National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow told
reporters that "I think the stock market is worried that Congress will
change and will overturn these pro-growth policies."

Many market experts believe October's carnage will be short-lived. Trump
will likely start talking up the stock market again when the pain ends.

Take his last tweet cheering on the stock market. It came on Oct. 16,
when major indexes rose more than 2 percent following a week of carnage.
First, he noted that the Dow rose 548 points.

The next day, Trump referenced what he said was a quote from "Fox &
Friends," a morning TV show the president frequently watches that covers
him favorably. "Network News gave Zero coverage to the Big Day the
Stock Market had yesterday," he wrote, apparently quoting an
unidentified speaker.
The Dow has fallen 3.7 percent since Oct. 17. The president has not tweeted about the market since.
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