Global financial markets came under pressure on Tuesday as stocks, long-dated United States Treasuries and the US dollar declined sharply, following renewed trade tensions between the United States and Europe, according to Reuters.
The sell-off reversed gains recorded earlier in the week, underscoring growing uncertainty among investors amid fresh tariff threats from Washington. Reuters reported that President Donald Trump’s renewed warning to impose tariffs on European imports reignited the so-called “Sell America” trade that followed a similar announcement in April last year.
As a result, investors pulled back from US assets, pushing Wall Street lower. The S&P 500 Index fell by 1.1 per cent to close at 6,859 points, while measures of market anxiety surged. The Cboe Volatility Index, widely regarded as Wall Street’s fear gauge, climbed as much as 1.9 points to an eight-week high of 20.69.
Commenting on the market reaction, Jim Carroll, senior wealth adviser and portfolio manager at Ballast Rock Private Wealth in South Carolina, said risk metrics had shifted significantly in recent days. However, he noted that the market response did not yet signal outright panic, but rather a meaningful reassessment of risk by investors.
Analysts said the spike in volatility was partly expected, coming shortly after last week’s monthly equity options expiration. Alex Morris, CEO and Chief Investment Officer of F/m Investments, explained that investors were responding to geopolitical uncertainty by reducing equity exposure and moving into traditional safe havens such as gold and cash.
In the currency market, the US dollar weakened despite heightened global uncertainty. The greenback fell 0.6 per cent against a basket of major currencies, sliding to a more than two-week low. Meanwhile, one-month implied volatility for the euro jumped to 6.03 per cent, reflecting growing uncertainty around Europe’s trade outlook.
Michael Brown, a market analyst at Pepperstone in London, warned that volatility could intensify further if there is little progress toward resolving the tariff standoff between the US and Europe. Investors, he said, remain highly sensitive to policy signals that could reshape global trade flows.
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