Yesterday’s trading session was one for the record books – and things don’t look to be calming down today, either. In fact, stocks are soaring in the early going along with gold and silver. Treasuries and the dollar are modestly lower after...you guessed it...wild swings on Monday.

Remember how I said a Trump 2.0 administration would mean more two-way VOLATILITY? Well, we had that in spades yesterday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average swung a record 2,595 points from low to high during Monday’s session – with an opening plunge followed by a miraculous surge on a fake headline, which was then given up again.

In dollars-and-cents terms, the “fake news” headline of a 90-day pause in ex-China tariffs added $2.4 TRILLION in value to US equities. Then it evaporated.

S&P 500, 10-Year Yield, Dollar Index (5-Day % Change)

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The volatility wasn’t confined to stocks, either. As MoneyShow contributor Jim Bianco of Bianco Research noted on X, the 10-year Treasury Note yield entered the day down 12 basis points from Friday’s close…then finished the day UP 19 bps. That was only the third time in more than a quarter-century of tracking that bond yields have moved like that. Volatility in the foreign exchange market, as tracked by a JPMorgan Chase & Co. index, is also at a two-year high.

While President Trump has so far stood firm on tariffs, his support is starting to give way. Business and Wall Street leaders are increasingly castigating him for his approach, with billionaire Bill Ackman warning they could fuel an “economic nuclear winter” and Ken Griffin, the world’s 31st richest man, describing them as a “huge policy mistake.” Even mega-supporter Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla Inc. (TSLA), reportedly asked Trump to reverse his latest levies.

That said, Japanese stocks surged overnight on news that Trump’s economic team will soon negotiate with the country over its levies. A visit with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday – which included friendly commentary on US-Israeli trade and relations – also helped lighten Wall Street’s mood (a bit).