logo
Cut a long story short: What is happening with tariffs this week?

Cut a long story short: What is happening with tariffs this week?

In April world financial markets went into a tailspin in the week after Donald Trump and Trade Secretary Howard Lutnick held their 'Liberation Day' tariff announcement day at the White House.
The convulsions became so extreme the White House was forced to back track – announcing a 90 day 'pause' with tariffs at a still high but less extreme 10pc on most global imports.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

When the world's most powerful banker issues a warning about Donald Trump's tariffs, we should listen
When the world's most powerful banker issues a warning about Donald Trump's tariffs, we should listen

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

When the world's most powerful banker issues a warning about Donald Trump's tariffs, we should listen

The financial markets are too relaxed about Donald Trump's policies. So said Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JP Morgan Chase , the world's biggest bank, at an event in Dublin this week. Even as the US president became 'tariff man' again this week – issuing threats right, left and centre – the stock markets rose higher, convinced that the worst on tariffs won't happen and that the US economy will find a way forward. Dimon is an ace communicator – crystal-clear and opinionated – and the word he used to sum up the current mood of the market is 'complacency'. And as investors are, in effect, betting on the economic outlook, the point is that we have all become so fed up and disorientated by Trump's constant tariff threats that they have become some kind of background noise. [ JP Morgan chief Jamie Dimon says markets too complacent on tariffs and interest rates Opens in new window ] While the Liberation Day announcement in early April caused shares to tumble and bond markets to shake – leading to a brief Trump retreat – stock markets have made ground strongly since and this week's flurry of threats caused barely a ripple. Everyone seems to be working on the assumption that Trump, in most cases, won't go ahead. After all, amid all the noise this week, the deadline for trade deals to be done was pushed out from this week to August 1st . Trump, on the other hand, is taking the rise in US shares to record highs as a vote of confidence in his policies. Indeed, he has become so encouraged that he has taken to issuing unilateral decisions on tariffs relating to various countries, without waiting for negotiations at all. Something, you would have to think, is going to have to give here sooner or later. Because the reality is – as has been the case all along – that Trump's policies are contradictory, illogical and hugely risky. READ MORE That doesn't meant that a recession is definitely on the way. But it does mean that Trump's tariff madness is going to cost US businesses and consumers and that his budget bill will pile on extra national debt, leaving the US more reliant on bond investors to fund the gap between spending and revenue. And we know how fickle they can be. Markets tend to move in waves, driven as much by mood as by new facts or data. What is taken as positive one day and seen as a reason to buy can turn around the next and be seen as supporting the case to sell. This is rationalised at the time by a particular piece of information – the latest US jobs report, EU inflation figures or the latest outpouring from the White House on tariffs – being better or worse than 'the market' expected at the time. This week the markets' attitude to Trump's announcements is they 'could have been worse and probably won't happen'. In a different mood, the interpretation might have been that the US president is doubling down on his dangerous trade war. Markets can remain detached from so-called fundamentals for long periods – and there is a host of academic studies on this. But the mood can turn on a sixpence, too, as facts that have been hiding in plain sight become the focus: like the risks from tariffs and the extraordinarily narrow economic path that the Trump administration is going to have to walk in the months ahead if something is not to go seriously wrong. Pressure on Federal Reserve Board chair Jay Powell to step down also has the potential to unnerve the markets. You can argue, or hope, that the worst will be avoided. That Trump can somehow navigate a way to pursue his tariff agenda while avoiding big economic damage and keeping the markets on board. But you can't say that Trump has found some kind of magic formula. Donald Trump, left, announces his 'Liberation Day' import tariffs plan at the White House in April. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP Just look at the figures. The average US tariff rate – according to researchers at Yale University – is now around 17 per cent, the highest since the 1930s. They calculate that this will add 1.8 per cent to inflation, costing US households $2,400 (€2,050) this year, with particular effects in areas such as clothing and footwear. Growth is hit, unemployment will be higher. Trump needs the cash to help shore up his budget. But look at the cost. Perhaps the time lag before the economic impact is fully evident is one factor in the lack of market reaction and the general view that tariffs will go up a bit and we will all be okay. And perhaps we will all muddle through. In Ireland, for example, economic indicators for growth and consumer spending are holding up, even though sources say that more recently there is a widespread slowing in investment and signs of the same in hiring. But here, too, familiar concerns remain. Ireland has escaped the worst of the tariff hit so far – suffering an additional 10 per cent on most exports to the US, but with pharma excluded. But the dangers ahead are clear, with Trump getting more bullish on generalised tariff threats as the EU/US talks come to a head and the story in relation to pharma still to play out, as the US president signals a longer-term push to get investment back 'home.' This does not mean the sky is about to fall in on the Irish economy. But as well as short-term uncertainties and the risk of rising transatlantic tensions, the brand of economic nationalism being peddled by Trump does pose longer-term issues in terms of trade with the US and investment from American companies. Ireland will hope for some accord between Washington and Brussels and for damage-limitation on pharma, but there is a lot to play out here. And as it does, the domestic economic debate, like that in the financial markets, seems strangely divorced from the risks. Ministers have put in spending demands for the new National Development Plan – the State's investment programme – billions of euro in advance of what will be available. There is no sign of a wider Cabinet agreement on the need to slow down the growth in day-to-day spending. Budget ministers Paschal Donohoe and Jack Chambers make the case, but are other ministers – including the Taoiseach and Tánaiste – bought in? Trump's meanderings on Truth Social and increasingly bizarre policies are not just some kind of reality television show. Jamie Dimon has a point. We have all become a bit complacent.

Trump and the Dow: 36,000 reasons to fear his next Fed move
Trump and the Dow: 36,000 reasons to fear his next Fed move

Irish Times

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Trump and the Dow: 36,000 reasons to fear his next Fed move

White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett hasn't the best track record on markets. Hassett cowrote the book Dow 36,000 at the peak of the dotcom bubble in 1999, saying stocks could 'quadruple tomorrow and still not be too high'. Alas, the Dow soon sank into a lengthy bear market, bottoming at 6,500 in March 2009. Hassett resurfaced as markets bottomed, accusing President Barack Obama of a 'war on business' and warning: 'No wonder that markets are imploding around us.' Within days, an 11-year bull market began. READ MORE The Dow eventually passed 36,000 in 2021 – fashionably late, by about two decades. Yet 'Dow 36,000″ was no career-ender, and Hassett may soon wield real influence over markets. The Wall Street Journal reports he is a front-runner to replace Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chairman next year, setting up a high-stakes reality-TV-style contest with former Fed governor Kevin Warsh. Warsh has the 'telegenic' edge, per the Journal, but may be too hawkish. Either way, Donald Trump will hope the so-called battle of the two Kevins will make for good TV. The stakes, though, are serious. Once a defender of Fed independence, Hassett now echoes Trump's demands for aggressive rate cuts and recently accused Powell of cutting rates 'right ahead of the election to help Kamala Harris'. As TS Lombard economist Dario Perkins notes, the real loser may not be Powell, but his successor. Whoever wins will arrive with a 'tacit understanding' to cut rates, and strong doubts about their independence.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store