By Aditya Soni
(Reuters) โ The โMagnificent Sevenโ stocks sank on Monday, extending a market rout that has wiped off around $2 trillion from their combined value as investors worry about the financial fallout of U.S. President Donald Trumpโs global tariff war.
The latest slide followed cuts in price target for Apple and Tesla shares from one of Wall Streetโs most bullish tech analysts, Dan Ives, who warned of a โtariff economic armageddonโ.
The cuts came as Trump doubled down on tariffs on Sunday, telling investors to endure the consequences and ruling out trade talks with China for now.
Tesla shares slumped 7% to $223, leading losses among the โMagnificent Sevenโ โ a group of high-performing tech stocks that powered Wall Streetโs rally for years but whose fortunes have taken a turn for the worse in the last few months.
The companies have collectively shed more than $6 trillion in market value since their peak in late 2024.
Apple, Alphabet and Microsoft were trading around one-year lows, with the iPhone maker falling 4.8%, while other โMag 7โ members fell between 1.5% and 4.8%.
The group has accounted for a large chunk of the more than $5 trillion the S&P 500 index has lost in value over the past two trading sessions.
Wedbush analyst Ives said as a U.S. tech company Apple has the biggest exposure to American tariffs on Chinese goods as most iPhones are assembled in China.
He said the trade war would also deepen Teslaโs challenges as the electric automaker grapples with a growing brand crisis sparked by CEO Elon Muskโs support of President Trump and far-right politics in Europe.
The warning underscores growing fears that tariffs could squeeze margins and disrupt supply chains at a time when several technology companies are facing scrutiny over their big AI spending.
Ives cut his target for Tesla shares to $315 from $550, which was one of the highest on Wall Street. His new target is still nearly $100 above the stockโs latest trading price.
On Apple, Ives slashed his target by $75 to $250, calling the tariffs โa complete disasterโ for the tech giant, which may have to raise U.S. iPhone prices to protect its lofty margins.
Apple had secured exemptions to U.S. tariffs on China during Trumpโs first term, but analysts are unsure if it can secure waivers this time despite announcing $500 billion in U.S. investments over the next four years.
The company has for years kept the starting price of its iPhone Pro model at $1,000. โThe concept of making iPhones in the U.S. is a non-starter in our view at $1,000,โ Ives said in a note. โPrice points would move up so dramatically itโs hard to comprehend.โ
On Tesla, which could be headed for another year of sales declines after a dismal first-quarter deliveries report, Ives said the trade tensions could push buyers in China to domestic rivals.
โThe backlash from Trump tariff policies in China and Muskโs association will be hard to understate and this will further drive Chinese consumers to buy domestic such as BYD,โ he said in a note published separately.
(Reporting by Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)
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