Today: 28 April 2026
VOO, QQQ, RSP Slide as Trump Tariff Threats Rattle Markets—Here’s What ETF Investors Are Watching
20 January 2026
2 mins read

VOO, QQQ, RSP Slide as Trump Tariff Threats Rattle Markets—Here’s What ETF Investors Are Watching

NEW YORK, January 20, 2026, 10:42 EST

  • Major U.S. equity ETFs dropped in morning trading amid a widespread selloff in stocks.
  • Vanguard’s S&P 500 fund VOO fell, tracking losses in the tech-heavy QQQ and equal-weight RSP.
  • New tariff news linked to Greenland reignited the debate over whether ETFs should focus on concentrated or diversified holdings.

Vanguard’s S&P 500 ETF (VOO) dipped 1.16% to $628.71 Tuesday morning, with investors stepping away from riskier bets. Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) fell 1.32% to $613.09, and the Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (RSP) declined 0.70% to $197.65.

Wall Street’s key indexes dropped sharply after President Donald Trump announced a new 10% import tariff kicking in Feb. 1 on goods from eight European nations, with a hike to 25% set for June 1. The tariffs are linked to tensions over Greenland. By 9:39 a.m. ET, the Dow was off 1.23%, the S&P 500 down 1.29%, and the Nasdaq fell 1.56%. The CBOE Volatility Index hit a two-month peak, Reuters reported. “We’re seeing weakness because the headlines are fueling anxiety about what lies ahead,” said David Lundgren, chief market strategist at Little Harbor Advisors. Reuters

ETF investors face tricky timing. Big index funds act as quick money parking spots for traders and long-only players, so sharp moves quickly reveal what kind of exposure you actually hold — whether it’s broad S&P 500, tech-heavy growth, or a mix designed to temper the largest names.

A TipRanks daily note reported VOO slipping about 1.3% in pre-market trades, holding mostly steady over the last five sessions. It’s still ahead by 14.7% for 2025. The firm rated VOO a “Moderate Buy” based on a weighted average of analyst ratings on its components. Analysts set an average price target of $746.80, suggesting roughly 17.4% upside. TipRanks put VOO’s yield at 1.11%, highlighting ServiceNow, Datadog, The Trade Desk, Oracle, and GoDaddy as top picks for upside potential. On the downside, Amcor, Moderna, SanDisk, Lennar, and Huntington Ingalls were flagged as the riskiest names. TipRanks

Motley Fool contributor Geoffrey Seiler highlighted VOO as a solid choice for investors looking to build a “core holding,” noting its low 0.03% expense ratio — the annual fee charged by the fund — and its goal of tracking the market-cap weighted S&P 500. In this type of index, the biggest companies have the most influence, which can pay off when the market leaders perform well, but can also hurt when they falter. The Motley Fool

VOO’s key competitors tracked closely. State Street’s SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) slipped 1.16% to $683.63, while BlackRock’s iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV) declined 1.12% to $686.89.

Motley Fool’s comparison of QQQ and RSP highlights the trade-offs, even though both are large and liquid funds. QQQ’s expense ratio stands at 0.18%, slightly lower than RSP’s 0.20%. Dividend yields are 0.4% for QQQ and 1.6% for RSP. Assets under management show a stark contrast: about $412.7 billion for QQQ versus $78.7 billion for RSP. The article also notes “beta” — a volatility measure against the S&P 500 — at 1.15 for QQQ and 0.96 for RSP. Looking at max drawdown over five years, QQQ dropped as much as 35.12%, while RSP’s biggest dip was 21.37%. From a $1,000 start, five-year growth was $1,993 for QQQ and $1,506 for RSP. RSP holds roughly 505 stocks, each weighted evenly through rebalancing, while QQQ’s portfolio is more concentrated, with technology making up over half and Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft alone accounting for more than 23% of assets. The Motley Fool

Put simply, equal-weight funds spread their bets evenly across all stocks, whereas market-cap weighted funds favor the largest companies because of their size.

The downside is baked in either way. If a tight cluster of mega-cap winners keeps pushing ahead, equal-weight funds may lag despite wider diversification. But if trade shocks hit or earnings disappoint, that concentrated tech exposure can turn a few rough days into a deeper drop.

The next trigger is political and complicated — will tariff threats actually become policy, and will Europe retaliate? Until that shakes out, investors might continue facing the same tough lesson: “S&P 500 exposure” isn’t a single bet anymore, and “diversification” has shifted meaning too.

Stock Market Today

  • Canadian Pacific Kansas City Q1 Earnings Preview: Mixed Signals Ahead of April 29 Release
    April 28, 2026, 3:43 PM EDT. Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CP) is set to report first-quarter 2026 earnings on April 29 after market close. Analysts expect earnings per share (EPS) of 78 cents, a 5.4% gain year over year but a downward revision of 6.02% in recent weeks. Revenue is forecasted at $2.71 billion, up 2.7% from Q1 2025. Freight volume declines across key sectors like fertilizers, energy, and automotive could pressure results, while rising costs and geopolitical tensions pose additional risks. Despite a 2% rise in revenue ton miles driven by growth in grain and potash shipments, CP's history of earnings underperformance and a negative Earnings ESP (-0.86%) with a Zacks Rank of 3 temper expectations. Investors await clarity after the company posted a Q4 2025 miss in both earnings and revenue.

Latest article

Chip Stocks Drop as OpenAI Report Tests Nvidia, AMD and Broadcom AI Rally

Chip Stocks Drop as OpenAI Report Tests Nvidia, AMD and Broadcom AI Rally

28 April 2026
Nvidia, AMD, and Broadcom shares fell Tuesday after a Wall Street Journal report said OpenAI missed internal user and revenue targets, raising concerns about future AI spending. Nvidia dropped 0.9%, AMD lost 2.5%, and Broadcom slid 4.1% by mid-afternoon. OpenAI disputed claims of internal disagreement over spending. The selloff came ahead of major tech earnings reports.
BigBear.ai Stock Jumps Before Q1 Earnings as BBAI Faces Its First Big 2026 Test

BigBear.ai Stock Jumps Before Q1 Earnings as BBAI Faces Its First Big 2026 Test

28 April 2026
BigBear.ai shares rose about 8% Tuesday to $4.03, with trading volume near 50.5 million ahead of first-quarter results due May 5. The company ended 2025 with $462 million in cash and investments after a 19.3% revenue drop and a $293.9 million net loss. Investors are watching the impact of its $250 million Ask Sage acquisition. Shareholders this month approved doubling authorized common shares to 1 billion.
Rare Earths Americas IPO Targets $368 Million Valuation As China Supply Fears Pull Investors In

Rare Earths Americas IPO Targets $368 Million Valuation As China Supply Fears Pull Investors In

28 April 2026
Rare Earths Americas began its U.S. IPO roadshow Tuesday, aiming for a valuation up to $368.4 million and planning to raise as much as $52.8 million by selling about 2.8 million shares at $17–$19 each. The exploration-stage miner, with projects in the U.S. and Brazil, will use proceeds to fund work at its Shiloh site and other projects. The company will list on NYSE American under the ticker “REA.”
Oracle stock price slides as tariff fears hit tech — what ORCL investors watch next
Previous Story

Oracle stock price slides as tariff fears hit tech — what ORCL investors watch next

Palantir stock dips despite Hyundai expansion as Reuters sources peg deal in “hundreds of millions”
Next Story

Palantir stock dips despite Hyundai expansion as Reuters sources peg deal in “hundreds of millions”

Go toTop