One Year Since Black Monday: Trump DDL is Here, Crash or Epic Bounce Tonight?
"History doesn't repeat itself, but it often rhymes." — Mark Twain
Trump threats that “a whole civilization will die tonight”. $WTI Crude Oil - main 2605(CLmain)$ roars to $115.
One year ago today: the day the market broke
April 7, 2025. The "tariff" announcement hit like a lightning bolt. What followed wasn't just a selloff. It was a waterfall. Screens flashed red.
Then came April 9th — just 48 hours later.
Trump announced a 90-day tariff pause for countries that hadn't retaliated. The market's reaction was immediate and historic: $S&P 500(.SPX)$ posted its biggest single-day gain since 2008. $NASDAQ(.IXIC)$ surged over 12% in one session. Those who had panic-sold at the lows watched the recovery happen without them.
By summer 2025, US equities had fully recovered April's losses. By year-end, driven by the AI wave and better-than-expected earnings, they were printing new all-time highs.
Déjà Vu, But totally different. Will Trump delay again?
The setup rhymes with last April. But this time, the variables are different. This isn't a tariff which Trump can decide. This is geopolitical brinkmanship with a hard deadline — 8:00 PM ET tonight (April 8 — Wednesday 8:00 AM Singapore time) — and two very different outcomes on the table.
Meanwhile, Trump — who has repeatedly extended deadlines over recent weeks — says another extension is "very unlikely." Traders, understandably, are skeptical.
As one Tokyo-based portfolio manager put it: "Markets are starting to treat Trump like the boy who cried wolf. The focus is shifting to whether Iran actually opens Hormuz."
Volume has been running below average since the latest ultimatum. That's not complacency — it's paralysis. Nobody wants to be wrong-footed twice.
What do you think will happen tonight
Me after the announcement tomorrow
or like this
If tonight brings a deal — or even a credible signal toward one — the setup for a violent snapback is real. Positioning is cautious, short interest has built, and a lot of hedges were put on at elevated implied volatility. That's kindling.
If it escalates — if the strikes happen — oil spikes, risk-off accelerates, and we revisit recent lows before the market figures out the next equilibrium.
Discussion
Q1: What did you learn from Black Monday last April?
Q2: How are you positioned going into tonight's deadline?
Q3: How will this high-stakes showdown end — a delay, a sharp drop, or a violent rebound?
Leave your comments to guess this epic night and win tiger coins
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Going into tonight, I’m staying cautious. With $FUT:WTI Crude Oil - main 2604(CLmain)$ already elevated, the setup feels very binary. I’m not chasing — just holding some cash and keeping hedges on. For me, capital preservation matters more than trying to perfectly call the move. Liquidity and flexibility are my priority here.
I think the market may still get some form of delay or softening. If that happens, a sharp relief rally is likely. If not, we probably see oil spike and equities drop before stabilizing. Either way, I’ll react, not predict.
@TigerClub @TigerStars @Tiger_comments
Meanwhile, Trump — who has repeatedly extended deadlines over recent weeks — says another extension is "very unlikely." Traders, understandably, are skeptical.
Last year's Black Monday taught me one thing:
Markets don't crash because of bad news. They crash because everyone panics at the same time & they always rebound after that.
What are the 3 possible endings?
A delay - the geopolitical version of "Let's talk next week". Markets breathe a sigh of relief.
A sharp drop - the classic rug pull that sent futures into freefall & everyone panics & runs for the exit.
A violent rebound - the kind of whiplash rally that sends the markets to the moon.
Whatever happens, the lesson is the same:
Position for resilience, not prediction.
I will continue to stay invested in index ETFs like $SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 ETF(SPYM)$ $SS SPDR STI ETF(ES3.SI)$ , keep dry powder for opportunities.
The market loves drama but rewards discipline & patience. It always recover long term.
@Tiger_comments
2. Regardless of the headlines the economic conditions are bearish
3. More negative news is expected resulting in a depression