Navigating the Market Storm: A Day of Volatility and Big Questions

Originally published at: Navigating the Market Storm: A Day of Volatility and Big Questions – Peak Prosperity

Wednesday, April 9, 2025, was one for the record books. As I sat down with my good friend Paul Kiker of Kiker Wealth Management for our latest Finance University podcast, the bond markets were in turmoil, doing things they really shouldn’t be doing, while stocks were mysteriously calm and well-bid.

And then all heck broke loose. Trump almost completely surprised everyone with a tariff announcement that sent shockwaves through the financial world, and I’m still trying to make sense of it all.

Here’s what happened, what it means to me, and why I think we’re at a turning point that’s bigger than most realize.

The day started with a bombshell. At 1:18 PM Eastern, Trump declared he was jacking up tariffs on China to 125%, effective immediately, citing their “lack of respect” for global markets.

China is the largest and most vital of all trade relationships in both dollar amounts and in terms of vital components, so I braced myself for a market plunge – after all, that kind of escalation was adding fuel to the trade bonfire.

But then came the twist: he followed it with a 90-day pause on tariffs for over 75 countries that had reached out to negotiate, slashing their rates to 10%. The markets didn’t take any time to digest this information, they immediately erupted higher. The S&P 500 soared 376 points, the Dow climbed nearly 2,500, and the Russell 2000 leapt almost 10%. It was a “rip your face off” rally, as Paul put it, the kind you usually see in bear markets, not on a random Tuesday.

But here’s the real kicker: just a few hours before the tariff pause tweet, Trump had posted, “This is a great time to buy!!!” with three exclamation points for extra emphasis.

That left a stench in the air. Was he front-running his own announcement? Are we supposed to scour his Truth Social feed for stock tips now?

Paul was just as frustrated, pointing out that only the big algo traders could move that fast. The average investor didn’t stand a chance. Worse, “somebody” magically bought a hefty amount of SPY end-of-day call options that launched 2,500% in a matter of minutes before the tweet came out.

It’s moments like these that make me question the game we’re all playing, especially when markets are this overvalued.


The markets are a minefield, and your wealth’s on the line. Volatility’s rising, debt’s a ticking bomb, and the old rules don’t work anymore. If you’ve got wealth to protect, you should get a financial plan review with the experienced team at Kiker Wealth Management. Start the process today by visiting Peak Financial Investing and filling out the intake form.


 

But here’s where it gets interesting: the bond market told a different story. Stocks might be for show, but bonds are for dough, as the old Wall Street saying goes. While equities were partying, the 30-year and 10-year Treasury yields kept climbing. To put it mildly, this is unusual.

Normally, when stocks tank, people pile into bonds, driving yields down. Not this time. I pulled up the charts for Paul, and we saw it plain as day—bonds were selling off, and the dollar wasn’t rallying either. Something was off.

Jim Bianco tweeted late last night that the bond market looked “disorderly,” hinting at a possible unwind of the basis trade—a geeky but critical leveraged bet on tiny price gaps between cash bonds and futures. When those bets go wrong, they can blow up spectacularly, and I’ve seen it before: 1998, 2002, and now, maybe 2025.

Gold, meanwhile, was screaming a signal I can’t ignore. It hit $3,100, up $117 on the day, shrugging off the usual 8 AM slam from U.S. traders. Asia’s been buying hand over fist, and the West is running low on supply. To me, gold clearly says there’s big money printing ahead, and maybe a dollar sacrifice is needed to keep this ship afloat. The dollar regime is over–dead, kaput! – and all efforts will now be expended trying to save the bond market.

I told Paul I think we’re heading toward a day when gold becomes “unaffordium,” as my friend Mike Maloney calls it, too expensive to buy for most, while silver will become “unobtainium,” affordably priced but nowhere to be found.

Reflecting on all this, it’s obvious we’re in uncharted waters.

“The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters.”

― Antonio Gramsci

Paul and I kicked around the idea that Trump’s team might be aiming for something audacious – maybe a Bretton Woods-level reset of global trade and the dollar’s role. Scott Bessent, Treasury Secretary, said on Tucker Carlson’s show that the old system was broken, juicing the economy with debt like a bodybuilder on steroids.

I buy into that. We’ve been pumping up the outside while the insides rot. If they’re serious about fixing it, tariffs are just a tool in a bigger plan. But man, it’s chaotic—90 days could turn into nine days with one tweet.

Paul’s take: use these face-ripping bear-market rallies as a chance to lower risk. Wild rallies are gifts if you’re disciplined and understand where we are in the macro story. Sell into strength, shore up cash, ladder some Treasuries for a few years if you’re retired.

For those with ears to hear, we’ve been warning about overvalued markets since last fall. The NASDAQ is ‘valued’ at six times sales, the Buffett Indicator is at the never-before-seen level of 208%. A 50% drop from these levels wouldn’t shock me as that would be light by historical comparison.

What keeps me up at night, though, isn’t just the numbers. It’s the human cost. I’ve seen the Fed double its balance sheet after every crisis, each time tossing another ladder rung of the population under the bus. First it was the poor. Then the bottom 50% of the country. Then the upper middle class…

In San Francisco, $108,000 a year is now the official poverty line. Imagine what’s next if the Fed doubles its balance sheet to $15 trillion. At that point it will literally be the 99% who have been officially tossed under the bus, during a time of incredible political fracture. Who thinks that doesn’t end very badly for everyone?

Paul and I agree: this path ends in cultural disaster unless someone breaks the cycle. Maybe Trump’s crew is trying. Maybe they’ll succeed. Maybe they’ll fail spectacularly. Either way, I’m staying vigilant—reading the smoke signals, pivoting when I need to, and keeping my eyes on gold, bonds, and the East-West divide.

For now, I’m signing off with a mix of intrigue and caution.

If you’re feeling the same, Paul’s team at peakfinancialinvesting.com can walk you through your risks—free consult, no pressure. It’s a wild ride, folks, but I’ll be back next week to unpack more. Stay sharp, stay nimble, and stay safe.

 

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Personally, I have soured on Trump. What he is doing is nothing but market manipulation and corruption. It’s disgusting! I’m sure he hurt a lot of average Americans with that stunt he just pulled with the tariff announcements the other day. There was a leak a couple days before that reported that Trump was planning to pause the tariffs for 90 days which caused stocks to rebound a bit. It was short lived because a White House spokesperson immediately came out and said that wasn’t true, he wasn’t pausing, and the market’s began to drop again. Fast forward a couple of days after that and Trump officially comes out and says it’s a good time to buy and that he’s pausing tariffs for 90 days. I’m sure there are a lot of older Americans getting ready to retire or who are already retired and living off their investments that sold the down market out of fear of losing everything they’ve worked for all their life only to see the markets rally back on Trump’s surprise announcement. They probably sold due to the fear and uncertainty that Trump is causing. I’m sure his wealthy, well connected friends benefited from early knowledge of what he was planning to do while some scared average Americans lost a large portion of their retirement savings trying to protect themselves from further downside. Trump is garbage. He’s fine with the little people becoming collateral damage in this “trade war” he’s waging. I hope it all works out, but it’s not looking too good so far.

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It’s almost as though he’s been put in charge of bringing the economy down to a point where people are so stressed they’ll actually welcome a new, programmable stablecoin “solution”, complete with Digital IDs and the promise of a social credit system.

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Very interesting take on the Trump Tariffs from Mark Moss. Mark speculates that Trump may be playing 4D chess to out pace China/BRICS for global dominance.

I am not “all in” on Mark’s analysis but believe it is worth a listen.

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Gold moving to new highs tonight.
US dollar index down big again and nearing critical support at 100.
Bounce here or continued collapse?

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I think that could definitely be part of the plan. We are being great-resetted and people aren’t paying attention because Trump is supposed to be our “great savior.” This way they can control the collapse and replace it with the programmable money and digital IDs they wanted all along.

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Amen. I would add he always has been.

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The more you need the money now, the more you shouldn’t be speculating in the stock market. I and a lot of people believe the market has a LOT more downside.

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Stocks possessing the manic/depressive characteristics that they do, I suppose I’m just not well versed enough in the details of the DSM 5 to feel comfortable playing in that casino like environment.

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https://x.com/RealPepeEscobar/status/1910224897173053769

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The Tucker Bassent interview has been stuck in my mind since release. Bassent talks about “the us consuming less and producing more, and China consuming more and producing less” as a potential way forward. I agree the US is in need of a massive shift in how we view wealth; the American dream has become consumerist when it should be more about development and resilience. But… asking China to become more like us seems like a dead end. Seems a bit quixotic to think that we can achieve both things within a 4 year term. Hope I’m wrong. If that’s what they really want, the WH messaging needs to get better. They aren’t selling the idea of a new American dream at all.

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https://x.com/solari_the/status/1910513211196997974

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You dont want gold to become the next Bitcoin, with retail hoarding and vertical ETF inflows driving parabolic moves. If you are invested in gold, you are actually hoping for a healthy pullback. A drop to 3150 or even 3050 and any close above 2950 would be ideal. You want strong support that allows gold to grind higher quietly rather than forcing what might be difficult decisions during a blowoff top. There is a lot more room for this story, but we need it to slow down and even revert some.

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Gallows humor

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Interesting presentation, thanks.

So the bond yield spiking is because of basis trade gone wrong or it’s not clear? I read on X it could be China selling US bonds.

It is a bit chaotic at the moment. One could be forgiven for coming to the conclusion that Trump is winging it, as is his style, and that there’s a bit of “making it up on the fly” as his point of view shifts about.

This is probably what makes him such a powerful negotiator, but relationships and markets suffer under the volatility of that approach.

For example, Trump is talking down oil; cheering on its price decline. This even after oil execs told him they needed $80. Now it’s $60. Even if it somehow goes back up to $80, capital decisions require some stability, often a year of price stability. So guess what? We’re going to get less oil out of the ground.

This dynamic is true for importers of every stripe…and who’s going to invest in PPE (new mfg plants) in America when the tariffs might be 3x or 0.05x next week?

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One theory going round is Trump is trying to push down the economy in the immediate term in order to compel the Fed to lower rates. Trump favors lower rates for many reasons but one is the $9.5T debt rolling over this year.

I don’t completely buy it but it has been postulated.

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Tariffs for show, backroom banking deals for a pro?

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My attention is on bonds and the dollar. “Stocks are for show, but bonds are for dough.”

Note that gold is sending a super-powerful signal to everyone.

If it suddenly vaulted up many hundreds of dollars, I’d be thinking “top” but it’s moving up by what feels like carefully measured amounts of 1% - 2% per day (so as not to raise any alarm bells in the Hoi Polloi crowd).

Note that while everyone is busy gnashing their teeth over a 10% tariff, or will it be 25%?!, the dollar has very quietly implemented a 9% tariff on the world (especially foreign bond holders who, upon repatriating US cash dollars into their local currency, will now on average be getting 9% fewer in exchange than before):

It’s now below the magic 100 mark, and the next support under that is 98. then 96, then 94, then 92, and then the big one at 90 (the red boxes):

Yes, it’s comical how the central banks organize their activities around round numbers…

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GDX and miners keep moving up…
Silver keeping pace with gold…

Anyone wanting to have fun with charts, graph S&P500 % return minus gold % return over the last month and over longer periods.

This is a crude model of the inflation-adjusted returns over the long run. The last month… more speculative than inflationary but it could be the endgame.

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