You may have noticed there was a really good sale on stocks this week.
Hope you were able to grab some bargains after the markets crashed on Tuesday and before they bounced back on Wednesday.
The Trump tariff global roller-coaster hurtled down 3 or 4 percent again on Thursday afternoon, so it’s safe to say that our wild stock market ride is not over yet.
My simple advice – and I’m not a registered stock broker, by any means – is not to panic.
Don’t sell your stocks when they go into a sudden free fall. Hold on, trust the market and try to take advantage of the temporary flash sale on solid stocks like Microsoft.
The last century has been dotted with crashes. But in the medium-to-long run stocks have always recovered, just like they did after 9/11, the financial crisis of 2008 and the covid lockdowns of 2000.
Historically, trusting the American stock market has been a much safer bet than trusting our political leaders.
But in the case of President Trump, I think we should trust him to get us out of what he’s gotten us into with the global tariff war he’s started.
Trusting Trump sounds a little crazy. But in case you haven’t noticed, he doesn’t think and act like a typical politician.
Sure, he occupies the White House. Sure, he likes to sign those executive orders. Sure, he knew how to get elected – twice.
But he still thinks and acts like what he is and always was – a hard-nosed New York City real estate tycoon who’s had a lot of financial ups and downs himself before ending up a billionaire.
For some reason, Trump loves tariffs and William McKinley’s 19th century protectionist trade policy.
Every famous economist you’ve never heard of says tariffs are bad. But Trump has been calling for them to be used to protect American manufacturing since the 1980s when he was buying full page ads in the New York Times to say it.
Until he proves otherwise, I’m going to bet on him and his team making the global economy a freer and fairer place for America to do business.
Copyright 2025 Michael Reagan, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.