Trump has inexplicably put a 90-day pause on his inexplicable tariffs. Except for China.
White House calls reports of 90-day tariff pause 'fake news.' CNBC reported Kevin Hassett said Trump is considering a 90-day pause in tariffs for all countries except China, sending stocks up briefly. Then CNBC reported White House officials are not aware of such a pause reut.rs/3XNwDEU[image or embed]
-- Reuters (@reuters.com) April 7, 2025 at 11:10 AM
Trump may have backtracked, but this is far from over
www.bbc.com
... There were some heroic efforts overnight from Donald Trump and those around him to suggest the past seven days were something other than absolute chaos.
By this reading, Trump's 4D game of chess has left China in check. Certainly the Chinese economy faces a massive hit from punitive tariffs in its biggest market. But even accounting for the President's roll back, the US has still erected a massive protectionist tariff wall, not seen since the 1930s.
The world is left with a universal 10% tariff, irrespective of whether that country (for example the UK or Australia) actually sells less to the US than the US sells to it. There is now no difference between the EU, which clearly does have a massive trade deficit in goods and was preparing to retaliate, and the UK.
There is also an anxious wait to find out what comes next. One of the questions is whether President Trump pushes ahead with tariffs on medicines, the UK's second biggest goods export.
Plus there is potential logistical chaos on the cards from a little-noticed multi-million dollar port tax for every cargo vessel docking in the US that was "made in China". That is more than half of the global merchant fleet - and it is due next Friday.
Even with Trump's stated 90 day pause on implementing higher tariffs, there remains too much uncertainty for companies to go through the rigmarole of rerouting global trade. ...
Many on Wall Street say sell the rallies because Trump can't undo damage already done
www.nbcnews.com
... Worry is lingering on Wall Street, even after President Donald Trump paused some of his wide-ranging tariffs.
The concern, which is underpinned by investors trying to contend with market volatility stoked by an unpredictable president, leaves little conviction in any future market rallies, according to UBS.
"Trump's administration isn't as impervious to market pain as it may have appeared for a while. Its pain threshold has just come into view," UBS strategist Bhanu Baweja said in a Thursday note. "Bottom line: [the] left tail is much thinner, but we are selling rallies until we learn."
UBS' shaky market conviction is echoed by others who say Trump's whipsaw actions leave a persistent feeling of uncertainty lingering over Wall Street. Morgan Stanley chief U.S. economist Michael Gapen said the economy is still at risk of entering a recession due to Trump's trade policy, while Raymond James reiterated its view that volatility is likely to persist. Their views suggest that enough damage has been done to justify serious questions about the strength of the market and economy. ...
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