The market thought that President Donald Trump would do everything to make the U.S. summit with North Korea work, but that didn’t happen, closely followed trader Art Cashin said Thursday.
“You saw a rally when it looked like everyone was getting along,” said Cashin, UBS director of floor operations at the New York Stock Exchange. “The assumption was that the president wanted very much to have this meeting. He was going to bend over backwards to get the support of [Chinese President] Xi to work on Kim.”
Instead, stocks fell intraday Thursday, with the Dow at one point slumping more than 180 points, after Trump announced that he had canceled the Singapore summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that was scheduled for next month.
Cashin told “Squawk on the Street” that the market could come off its lows because investors may realize that Trump’s cancellation of the meeting with North Korea is part of the president’s ‘Art of the Deal’ approach.
The markets’ decline on Thursday is also due to the Commerce Department’s investigation into whether the surge in automobile imports threatens to “impair” national security by “weakening” the U.S. economy, Cashin said.
“We’re back to nose to nose on warfare negotiations and certainly nose to nose on trade policy,” Cashin said, adding the Trump administration has had “enormous swings” in its stances on certain issues.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross on Thursday defended his department’s investigation.
Ross said in a “Squawk Box” interview that “national security is broadly defined,” adding, “economic security is military security; and without economic security, you can’t have military security.”
Toyota‘s U.S.-traded shares were lower on the news, while domestic auto stocks were mixed.
Source: Investment Cnbc
Art Cashin: Stock drop reflects mistaken assumption Trump would do everything to make North Korea summit work