
Senior trade adviser Peter Navarro attends an interview with CNN, at the White House, in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 10, 2025.Ā
PresidentĀ Donald Trumpās trade advisorĀ Peter NavarroĀ on Friday encouraged Americans to buyĀ stocksĀ one day after dismissing a steep market drop fueled by fears ofĀ a tariff-induced slowdown as āno big deal.ā
Navarro predicted market gains will result from Trumpās proposed U.S. tax cuts, and from potential trade deals with countries seeking to avoid higher tariffs he has threatened.
āLet me just say, ninety deals in ninety days, biggest, broadest tax cut in American history should be driving the tape,ā Navarro said in an interview on Fox BusinessĀ Network. āThatās whatās going to be a bullish market.ā
āIf youāre not long, youāre going to get left behind,ā he added.
Navarroās comments echo those from Trump and other officials, who talked up the stock market in the face of high volatility and price swings over the past week.
āThis team is just the best in history,ā Navarro said of Trumpās economic advisors. āAmerica should trust in Trump. The market should trust in Trump and not get these weak knees, because this is going to be bullish.ā
As of Friday, the benchmarkĀ S&P 500Ā stock market index was 12.5% below its opening value on Jan. 20, the day Trump reentered the White House.
But Navarro, speaking before the opening of the trading day, argued that people who own stock that has dropped in recent weeks only have paper losses.
āIf you donāt sell, you donāt lose,ā he said.
The advisor also took a shot atĀ JPMorgan ChaseĀ CEOĀ Jamie Dimon.
āJamie Dimon, while heās wringing his hands about all this, his firm made out like bandits trading on the volatility,ā Navarro told Fox Business.
āAnd thatās the concern here. The small investor needs to just sit tight, not panic, and donāt let these big firms shake you out.ā
He added, āIād rather have mom and pop have a solid portfolio than Jamie Dimon have another billion dollars.ā

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, leaves the U.S. Capitol after a meeting with Republican members of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on the issue of debanking on Thursday, February 13, 2025.Ā
Tom Williams | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images
Following JPMorgan Chaseās positive earnings report Friday morning, Dimon said, āThe economy is facing considerable turbulence including geopolitics, with the potential positives of tax reform and deregulation and the potential negatives of tariffs and ātrade wars,ā ongoing sticky inflation, high fiscal deficits and still rather high asset prices and volatility.ā
āAs always, we hope for the best but prepare the Firm for a wide range of scenarios,ā Dimon said.
On Thursday, the S&P 500 saw a drop of 3.46%, and theĀ Dow Jones Industrial AverageĀ shed 1,000 points, or 2.5%.
Those declines came a day after stock market indices rocketed upwards, on news of Trumpās pause for 90 days of higher-than-baseline tariffs on all countries except China.
Hours before he announced the tariff pause Wednesday, Trump appeared to tout the stock market, which at the time had fallen for four straight days on fears of tariff-induced recession.
āBE COOL!ā Trump wrote on Wednesday. āTHIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!!ā
But Thursdayās stock market pullback came after analysts pointed out that the overall U.S. tariff rate on imports was very high as a result of additional duties Trump slapped on Chinese imports Wednesday.
āYou had the highest rise in stock market history yesterday,ā Navarro said on CNN Thursday. āOf course, thereās gonna be a little pullback. The question is: What spin are you gonna put on it?ā
āItās just normal retracement after a big day. Itās no big deal,ā Navarro said.
Days earlier, Navarro had touted the stock market during a Sunday interview on Fox News.
āYou canāt lose money unless you sell and right now the smart strategy is not to panic, just stay in because we are going to have the biggest boom in the stock market weāve ever seen,ā Navarro told āSunday Morning Futures.ā
āWe will hit 50,000 on the Dow by the end of this term.ā