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3 possibilities of how Trump answers questions about his historically bad 100-day stock market (or dodge))

Donald Trump and his white house will go out to apply for the second 100th day of the president in office, but her boasting must have had the worst start of the stock market for a president for decades.

The president cannot resist to brag about days when the market has expired. This is a continuation of a tendency that goes back for years. But so far these days have only been a few days, despite a back bumper over the past week.

Overall, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) finally dropped by 7.3% by Tuesday, since Trump's inauguration has been the worst start for investors for a new president since the 1970s when both Richard Nixon (when he started his second term) and Gerald Ford (when he was in office after the resignation of Nixon).

This tariff tariff-routes leads to recession and is a deeply impractical fact for the president who came into office and appealed to the “Trump effect” on shares that they said they would bring the prices up.

Instead, the opposite has occurred, with the president and his team offering a number of explanations. A review of dozens of examples of Trump's market comments and its orbit in the past few weeks has been referring to three strategies that are used to explain the separation.

Trump's chorus and his helpers are most common that these losses are essentially part of their plan or at least a short “transition period”, which will soon be reversed when the economy adapts to its tariffs.

A second frequent reaction lies on a number of other factors – from technology to healthcare to Joe Biden – to explain the losses.

Trump and his adjutants sometimes said goodbye to a third approach to downplay the importance of the stock market, but it only takes until the next day.

In the end, the last resort to Trump is perhaps to advocate ignorance.

“I haven't seen it,” Trump offered during a cabinet seat on April 10 during a large sale and found profits instead of the day before. He handed over things to Finance Minister Scott Bessent, who said that this day he saw nothing unusual “something unusual” of 1,000 points.

Here is a closer look at the three options, as Trump World explained the rocky ride of the stock exchange:

The proclamation of Trump's “Liberation Day” on April 2 followed the next day an IPO.

“It is to be expected,” offered Trump when he flew to Florida that evening. He compared the economy to “a sick patient who went through an operation on the day of the liberation, and it will be a very booming country … We only have to give it a little time.”

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