S&P 500 Is Heading for a Bear Market as Tariffs Hit Everything

President Donald Trump’s trade war has US stocks on track to enter their first bear market since the Covid pandemic.

The S&P 500 Index sank another 3.5% Monday, putting it 20% below the record high set less than two months ago — the second-fastest plunge of the 14 bear markets since 1945, CFRA data show. Some $9.5 trillion in value has been lost in just 33 trading days. Wall Street’s fear gauge — the CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX — jumped higher than 60 overnight after closing at 45 Friday, well above the long-term average of 20.

US stocks

Selling was heaviest among chipmakers, with Super Micro Computer Inc., On Semiconductor Corp. and Micron Technology Inc. down at least 37% since the S&P peaked on Feb. 19. Shares in travel firms from Delta Air Lines Inc. to Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Inc. lost more than 40%. Nvidia Corp. is off 32%, Tesla Inc. some 35% and Palantir Technologies Inc. even more.

Investors are rapidly pricing in a recession after Trump announced the harshest trade barriers in a century last week, ditching risk assets in favor of havens like Treasuries and the Japanese yen.