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What is the Taco Trade and how is it linked to President Trump's tariffs?

What is the Taco Trade and how is it linked to President Trump's tariffs?

Daily Mail​2 days ago

Many on Wall Street see the president's mercurial behaviour as a way to capitalise on the 'Taco Trade.'
This involves buying stocks after markets go down due to President Donald Trump imposing or threatening tariffs, then selling them as their value recovers when the president declares a pause or retreat.
Coined by Financial Times journalist Robert Armstrong, Taco stands for 'Trump Always Chickens Out.'
It essentially means Trump will reverse course if the economic fallout from his tariff policies becomes too severe and obvious.
Near the end of May, President Donald Trump warned that he would slap a 50 per cent tariff on goods imported from the European Union starting from the beginning of June.
He said negotiations were 'going nowhere' with the trading bloc, which sold more than $600billion of goods to the US last year.
Yet after shares spiralled and the EU said it would not make a deal based on 'mutual respect, not threats,' Trump backed down just two days later.
He said the tariffs would instead be imposed from 9 July. US stocks subsequently soared the following Tuesday.
It was not the first time Trump has backtracked on tariffs; he agreed to lower taxes on imported Chinese goods from 145 per cent to 30 per cent last month for 90 days after China raised their own levies on US products to 125 per cent.
And on 9 April, the US president suspended 'reciprocal' tariffs - higher import taxes on dozens of nations - announced in his 'Liberation Day' speech the previous week.
As Armstrong wrote: 'The US administration does not have a very high tolerance for market and economic pressure, and will be quick to back off when tariffs cause pain.'
Trump unsurprisingly reacted badly when asked about the acronym by a reporter, calling her question 'nasty.'
He remarked: 'I think we really helped China tremendously because, you know, they were having great difficulty because we were basically going cold turkey with China.
'We were doing no business because of the tariff because it was so high. But I knew that.'
More recently, the president reignited uncertainty into the global trading system as he warned of his intentions to double tariffs on steel and aluminium imports to 50 per cent.
And on Monday, China accused the US Government of 'seriously violating' the trade deal agreed last month in Geneva, Switzerland.
Tom Hibbert, multi-asset strategist at Canaccord Wealth, said 'there is an element of negotiating strategy' in Trump's approach to tariff policy, 'although it relies more on blunt force than measured diplomacy, which has introduced huge uncertainty.'

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