How the S&P 500 recovered all of its losses for the year

A pair of traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Wednesday, March 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
NEW YORK — Conditions appeared dire for the stock market in early April. President Donald Trump followed through on a campaign promise and announced sweeping tariffs against most US trading partners. The S&P 500 dropped 12 percent in four days.
Economists warned of a recession. Consumer confidence, already waning, weakened further. Corporate executives struggled to give investors a clear picture of their financial prospects.
This week, though, the S&P 500 rallied 5.3 percent and turned positive for 2025. Just a few weeks ago, the index at the heart of many 401(k) accounts was down about 15 percent for the year.
Analysts caution that the tariff drama is hardly over, and stocks could fall again. But the run for US stocks back upward has been just as wild and unexpected as its fall. Here’s a look at what happened:
‘Liberation Day’
Trump on April 2 and announced steeper-than-expected tariffs on almost all US trade partners. He especially targeted China, eventually raising the duties on imports from China to 145 percent.
READ: Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ wallops stock markets worldwide
Beijing retaliated by raising tariffs on US goods to 125 percent. Investors fled the US stock market.
Pause 1
On April 9, Trump announced on social media a “90-day PAUSE” for most of the tariffs he’d announced a week earlier. That is, except those against China.
The S&P 500 soared 9.5 percent for one of its best days ever.
Bonds and the dollar
Trump largely ignored the damage to the stock market. This was surprising for a president who boasted repeatedly during his first term about how the Dow was doing. But he couldn’t ignore the signs of trouble in the bond and foreign exchange markets.
Tumbling prices for US government bonds raised worries that the US Treasury market was losing its status as the world’s safest place to keep cash. The value of the US dollar also sank. It was another signal of diminishing faith in the United States as a safe haven for investors.
READ: Collective action to avoid a trade war
Unlike stocks, Treasurys and the dollar haven’t fully bounced back. Some of that may be because of shifting expectations for what the Federal Reserve will do with interest rates. But it’s also still a signal that investors globally still have some trepidation about the United States.
The economy
Consumer sentiment has weakened – it has fallen for five straight months by one measure. But what investors call “hard data,” such as employment numbers, indicate the economy is still doing OK.
Recent data show employers added 177,000 jobs in April and that inflation has cooled.
Plenty of profits
Through all the market’s tumult, US companies have continued to deliver profit reports for the start of the year that have topped analysts’ expectations. Stock prices tend to follow profits over the long term, and that’s given the market a notable boost.
Three out of every four companies in the S&P 500 have beaten analysts’ expectations for profits in recent weeks. These include such market heavyweights as Microsoft and Meta Platforms. They’re on track to deliver growth of nearly 13.6% from a year earlier, according to FactSet.
Pause 2
Wall Street’s outlook brightened this month as the US signaled a willingness to negotiate on trade. Last week, the administration struck a deal with the United Kingdom.
Then came the biggest news: The US and China said Monday that they were temporarily rolling back most of the tariffs they’d imposed on one another. The S&P 500 rose to its best day since the first tariff pause.
What’s next?
Even as companies have delivered fatter profits than expected, many have also warned they’re unsure about what lies ahead. CEOs have been either lowering or withdrawing their financial forecasts for the year given all the uncertainty around how Trump’s tariffs will end up.
Market stalwarts such as Apple and Alphabet are still down double-digits for the year. The Nasdaq composite, with a bigger roster of technology companies, is still down 0.5 percent.
Analysts are quick to remind investors that most tariffs have been paused, not eliminated, and others are still in place. Trump retained a baseline 10 percent tariff against other countries. US tariffs against China are still at 30 percent.
“I would advise investors to remain cautious in the near term and to be prepared for unexpected news from the trade front,” said Louis Wong earlier this week. Wong is director for Phillip Securities Group in Hong Kong.