Bitget App
Trade smarter
Buy cryptoMarketsTradeFuturesEarnWeb3SquareMore
Trade
Spot
Buy and sell crypto with ease
Margin
Amplify your capital and maximize fund efficiency
Onchain
Going Onchain, without going Onchain!
Convert
Zero fees, no slippage
Explore
Launchhub
Gain the edge early and start winning
Copy
Copy elite trader with one click
Bots
Simple, fast, and reliable AI trading bot
Trade
USDT-M Futures
Futures settled in USDT
USDC-M Futures
Futures settled in USDC
Coin-M Futures
Futures settled in cryptocurrencies
Explore
Futures guide
A beginner-to-advanced journey in futures trading
Futures promotions
Generous rewards await
Overview
A variety of products to grow your assets
Simple Earn
Deposit and withdraw anytime to earn flexible returns with zero risk
On-chain Earn
Earn profits daily without risking principal
Structured Earn
Robust financial innovation to navigate market swings
VIP and Wealth Management
Premium services for smart wealth management
Loans
Flexible borrowing with high fund security
S&P 500 surges 20% in six weeks as market euphoria returns on Wall Street

S&P 500 surges 20% in six weeks as market euphoria returns on Wall Street

CryptopolitanCryptopolitan2025/05/18 06:00
By:By Jai Hamid

Share link:In this post: The S&P 500 surged 20% in six weeks after hitting a low on April 7 during peak tariff fears. Trump’s retreat on China tariffs fueled the rally and brought the index back into the green for the year. Retail favorites like Robinhood, CoreWeave, and Nvidia saw massive gains, with AI and IPO activity ramping up.

The S&P 500 has erased six weeks’ worth of panic and clawed its way back from a near-bear breakdown, jumping 20% since April 7 as traders dumped their fears and grabbed every rebound they could find.

According to data from CNBC, the rally started after tariffs reached their peak tension point in early April, which triggered the heaviest liquidation seen since the start of the year. That fear didn’t last. As soon as the Trump administration hinted at backing off the China tariff hikes, bulls piled back in and stocks lit up.

The sell-off from February’s highs had already wiped out nearly a fifth of the index’s value. But technical traders had started calling the setup “so bad it’s good” — and they were right. From that intraday bottom, the S&P 500 exploded by 23%.

By last Friday, it had reclaimed levels above the 200-day moving average and pushed past the April 2 “Liberation Day” closing price. It’s now back in the green for the year, sitting right above where it was the day after the 2020 election.

Traders rotate fast as volatility crashes and momentum builds

The market’s comeback wasn’t quiet. It’s been a straight-line grind higher, the kind of boring rally that signals strength, not weakness. Last week alone, the S&P 500 added 5.3%. Technical indicators triggered momentum and breadth signals that usually only go off during a real escape from a market bottom.

See also Boeing stock gains after record $200 million jet order from Qatar

The VIX, Wall Street’s fear gauge, plunged from 50 to under 20 faster than ever recorded. It ended the week at 17, a level that reflects calm instead of chaos.

Retail names like Robinhood, Palantir, and CoreWeave have soared 50% to 60% since April 7. Robinhood and Palantir moved almost in sync. CoreWeave, which only IPO’d last month, is up nearly 60%. Nvidia spiked 16%.

Meanwhile, social trading firm eToro, which went public last week after ditching its 2021 SPAC plans, jumped 20% right out of the gate. Stablecoin firm Circle, along with fintechs Klarna and Chime, have all filed to go public too. Brokerage and investment banking stocks as a group are back near their highs, riding the wave of investor confidence.

Tariff retreat feeds bulls as AI and fiscal noise shape outlook

The real fuel for the rally came when President Donald Trump backed away from his sky-high China tariffs. Warren Pies, chief investment officer at 3Fourteen Research, said the rebound is tracking similar to policy-driven bottoms seen in 1998, 2011, and late 2018.

But this isn’t pure euphoria. Hedge funds and institutional investors are still underweight. Surveys of retail traders and financial advisors show sentiment barely above recent bearish lows. The energy from late 2024’s “animal spirits” is trying to restart, but hasn’t fully ignited yet.

See also Republican infighting: GOP Congressman attacks Rep Marjorie for Pelosi-like Liberation Day stock trades

Some of the volatility in April wasn’t about tariffs at all. The first dip came after momentum tech names reversed sharply when DeepSeek’s AI challenge threw off the usual order. But since then, most major platforms have doubled down on capex, and the AI story is back in business.

Big names are inching back to their highs. The Nasdaq Composite, since ChatGPT launched, has eerily followed the same pattern it took after Netscape’s debut in 1994. By 1997, it had tripled. No one’s betting on a repeat just yet, but the resemblance hasn’t gone unnoticed.

As for tariffs, their impact could still change the game. The US trade deficit with China is just 1% of GDP. China’s exports to the US make up 3% of its economy. But even small disruptions create confusion. If those tensions linger, they could drag on jobs and housing, which are already slowing. And now the “free pass” zone is over. The next wave of economic data will hit harder.

Valuation-wise, the S&P 500 is trading at 21.5 times forecast earnings over the next year. That’s high. It’s not crisis-high, but it’s uncomfortable. Back in February, it hit 22x—above that, and markets usually want more than just talk.

Cryptopolitan Academy: Want to grow your money in 2025? Learn how to do it with DeFi in our upcoming webclass. Save Your Spot

0

Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.

PoolX: Locked for new tokens.
APR up to 10%. Always on, always get airdrop.
Lock now!