Apple’s Historic Selloff Has Bulls Balking From Tariff Risks

A sharp selloff in shares of Apple Inc. illustrates investor skepticism about its ability to navigate President Donald Trump’s tariffs on China, Vietnam and India — countries all critical to the iPhone maker’s supply chain.

Its shares have dropped 19% since last week’s tariffs announcement, marking the worst three-day stretch for Apple since 2001. The rout erased more than $637 billion in market value from the tech giant and sent a proxy for the stock’s volatility skyrocketing.

“The tariff situation really complicates things for Apple. What is it going to do? Raise prices? That will hit demand. Absorb costs? That will hurt earnings and margins,” said Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Advisor Services Inc. “It is very difficult to assess prospects from here, and that’s why the market has reacted the way it has.”

The risk became more acute with Monday’s threat of an additional 50% levy after China retaliated against previous tariffs with one of their own on US imports.

apples worst three day run

Wall Street analysts and investors alike are now trying to assess both how tariffs and a slowdown in one of Apple’s major growth markets will impact margins, spending and the stock price. The shares were up in premarket trade Tuesday following the previous day’s losses.