https://wallstreetonparade.com/2025/04/nasdaq-has-lost-more-than-3000-points-since-trumps-first-full-day-in-office-in-2025-the-pain-has-barely-begun/


*By Pam Martens and Russ Martens
<https://wallstreetonparade.com/about-3/about/>: April 21, 2025 ~*

The clown show in Washington
<https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/20/politics/hegseth-second-signal-chat-military-plans/index.html>
should
not divert your gaze from the circus at the Nasdaq stock market.

On January 20, 2025, the day that Donald Trump was sworn into office for
his second term as President, the stock market was closed in honor of
Martin Luther King Jr. Day. On January 21, 2025, Trump’s first full day in
office, the Nasdaq stock market closed at 19,756.7793. On Thursday, April
17, 2025 – the final day of trading last week because the stock market was
closed for Good Friday on April 18 – the Nasdaq closed at 16,286.4476 –
bringing its losses during Trump’s new reign in the White House to
3,470.3317 points or 17.57 percent. (The data comes from Dow Jones’
BigCharts.MarketWatch.com.)
[image: Nasdaq Performance vs Alphabet, Nvidia, and Tesla Since Trump's
First Day in Office in 2025]
<https://wallstreetonparade.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Nasdaq-Performance-vs-Alphabet-Nvidia-and-Tesla-Since-Trumps-First-Day-in-Office-in-2025.jpg>

Nasdaq Performance vs Alphabet, Nvidia, and Tesla Since Jan 21, 2025

There are legitimate questions now being raised as to whether we’re in a
tech bubble that’s going to burst in a replay of the disastrous dot-com
bust of 2000 to 2002. Last year, we wrote as follows about that period:

The Nasdaq reached a closing high of 5,048.62 on March 10, 2000. The Nasdaq
then proceeded to lose 78 percent of its value over the next 2-1/2 years,
reaching a closing low of 1,114.11 on October 9, 2002.

As late as February 2000, there was little recognition in mainstream media
that the Nasdaq was on the cusp of entering one of the bloodiest selloffs
in stock market history. CNNMoney reported as follows
<https://money.cnn.com/2000/02/29/markets/markets_newyork/> on February 29,
2000:

“U.S. stocks rallied broadly Tuesday, sending every major market gauge
higher and the Nasdaq composite index to its 12th record close of the year
as investors snapped up technology shares expected to lead the economy’s
growth.”

The same news report quoted Legg Mason’s Chief Market Strategist at the
time, Richard Cripps, as follows: “People want to own these (technology)
stocks, and that’s what limits any significant drop on these stocks and
it’s what puts pressure on the remainder of the market.”

Less than two weeks later, investors began the stampede out of the market
darlings.

In 2017, the legendary investor, Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway,
penned his annual letter to shareholders. In it, he opined as follows:

“Above all, it’s our market system – an economic traffic cop ably directing
capital, brains and labor – that has created America’s abundance. This
system has also been the primary factor in allocating rewards.”

Unfortunately, Buffet was reflecting a nostalgic yearning for how *he
wished* the U.S. markets still worked. He was not providing a genuine
assessment of how U.S. markets are *actually functioning*.

In fact, federal regulators turning a blind eye to market rigging has made
the exact opposite of Buffett’s analysis the true reality. The stock market
has become a blindfolded traffic cop, *misallocating* capital, brains and
labor. And a whole platoon of crooked and blindfolded market cops have
replaced the market’s efficient pricing mechanism with Dark Pools and
trading platforms hiding out in the shadows in the U.S. and abroad.
(See JPMorgan
Chase and Its Regulators Are Hiding Dark Trading Secrets at the Largest and
Riskiest U.S. Bank
<https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/05/jpmorgan-chase-and-its-regulators-are-hiding-dark-trading-secrets-at-the-largest-and-riskiest-u-s-bank/>;
or Citigroup Ran a Secret, Unregistered Stock Exchange for More than Three
Years
<https://wallstreetonparade.com/2018/09/sec-citigroup-ran-a-secret-unregistered-stock-exchange-for-more-than-three-years/>;
or Goldman Sachs Is Quietly Trading Stocks In Its Own Dark Pools on 4
Continents
<https://wallstreetonparade.com/2019/06/goldman-sachs-is-quietly-trading-stocks-in-its-own-dark-pools-on-4-continents/>;
or Wall Street Banks Are Trading in Their Own Company’s Stock: How Is This
Legal?
<https://wallstreetonparade.com/2017/02/wall-street-banks-are-trading-in-their-own-companys-stock-how-is-this-legal/>
)

What fueled the dot-com boom were corrupt research reports from the major
trading houses on Wall Street, which urged investors to “buy” while the
same research analysts were internally calling the stocks “crap.”

On April 28, 2003, the Securities and Exchange Commission settled its cases
against the corrupt research practices with 10 Wall Street banks for $875
million. Investors lost more than $4 *trillion* but Wall Street got off
with a payment of $875 *million*. No one went to jail. Just two individual
analysts were charged: Jack Grubman of Citigroup’s former Salomon Smith
Barney unit and Merrill Lynch’s Henry Blodget. Both men were barred from
future affiliation with a broker-dealer and paid fines that were a fraction
of the bonuses they had collected from their firms.

The same Wall Street banks that settled with the SEC in 2003 have continued
to be allowed to issue research reports on companies for whom they
underwrite stock and debt offerings. In addition, they are allowed by the
SEC to trade these same stocks in their own Dark Pools, which are,
effectively, unregulated stock exchanges that reside inside the banks.
Among the banks that were fined in 2003 by the SEC and are operating Dark
Pools today are: JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and
Merrill Lynch.

While many Wall Street stockbrokers are likely to urge their clients to buy
the dips or at least stay put and ride out the tech market storm (since
many are paid a fee based on their amount of assets under management), the
reality is that it can take a very long time to get back to even after a
major market bust.

After the dot-com bust, the Nasdaq was so discredited that it did not reset
its March 2000 high until 15 years later. In fact, it remained 50 percent
or more below that high until 2007. After the 1929 stock market crash, the
stock market did not set a new high until 25 years later.

A new report out from InvestorsObserver.com
<https://investorsobserver.com/research/report-microsoft-took-17-years-to-recover-from-the-dot-com-crash-will-history-repeat-for-ai-stocks/>
reminds
us that “Microsoft took 17 years to recover from the dot-com crash” and the
report asks if history will repeat for artificial intelligence (AI) stocks.
The report alarmingly notes that “The S&P 500’s top 10 companies now make
up 33% of the index’s total market capitalization – one of the highest
levels on record.”

Cisco, another darling of the dot-com era, reached a high of $80.06 on
March 27, 2000
<https://bigcharts.marketwatch.com/historical/default.asp?symb=csco&closeDate=03%2F27%2F2000&x=27&y=25>.
It’s now *a quarter of a century later* and Cisco has not set a new high.
Buying at market tops can, indeed, be hazardous to your wealth.

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