Business News Viewpoint

Sulky seesaw stock markets

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Stock markets are having a full-blown teenage meltdown. One minute they’re sulking over tariffs, the next they’re soaring on surprise inflation data. Sound familiar? It should – this is the kind of hyper-reactivity we used to associate exclusively with crypto.

The S&P 500’s recent rollercoaster ride – a 15% drop followed by a near-vertical rebound – exposes how juvenile today’s financial markets have become.

A few weeks ago, Donald Trump’s “liberation day” tariffs sent traders into panic, slashing growth forecasts and dumping stocks like they were last season’s tech. Then, on the mere hint of a pause in trade tensions, Wall Street turned euphoric. Nvidia soared, Palantir surged and the Nasdaq rediscovered its swagger.

This isn’t sophisticated price discovery – it’s a tantrum disguised as market sentiment.

The underlying problem is simple: markets are hooked on policy pivots and headline spin. Investors no longer trade on fundamentals or long-term outlooks. They chase vibes. If it’s not a presidential tweet or central bank whisper, it’s a whisper of a whisper – and boom, the S&P whipsaws.

Statesmanlike serenity replaced with emotional reactions

Sound eerily like Bitcoin’s mood swings? That’s because the difference is shrinking. We used to scoff at crypto for its whiplash volatility and meme-driven valuations. Now, equities are just as trigger-happy, only with a corporate gloss and Fed footnotes.

Of course, there are structural forces behind it – algorithmic trading, relentless media cycles, a retail army trained on dopamine. But the result is the same: price action driven more by nerves than nuance.

Volatility isn’t inherently bad. But volatility born of inconsistency and policy U-turns? That’s not a bull run – it’s a sugar rush. And like any sugar rush, the crash will come.

Until the financial world learns to act its age, expect more tantrums. And hold onto your portfolio – it’s going to be a bumpy, bratty ride.

Josh Moreton

Columnist
Josh has over a decade of experience in political campaigns, reputation management, and business growth consulting. He comments on political developments across the globe.

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