logo
Investors head into Trump tariff deadline benumbed and blase

Investors head into Trump tariff deadline benumbed and blase

SINGAPORE/NEW YORK: Global investors are heading into U.S. President Donald Trump's Wednesday deadline for trade tariffs palpably unexcited and prepared for a range of benign scenarios that they believe are already priced in.
Just days before the end of a 90-day pause he announced on his April 2 'Liberation Day' tariffs, Trump said the first batch of letters outlining the tariff levels they would face on exports to the United States would be sent to 12 countries on Monday.
Investors who have been tracking this date for months expect more details to emerge in the coming days and protracted uncertainty too, anticipating Trump will not be able to complete deals with all of America's trading partners in the coming week.
And they are not overly concerned.
'The market has gotten much more comfortable, more sanguine, when it comes to tariff news,' said Jeff Blazek, co-chief investment officer of multi-asset at Neuberger Berman in New York.
'The markets think that there is enough 'squishiness' in the deadlines – absent any major surprise – to not be too unsettled by more tariff news and believe that the worst-case scenarios are off the table now.'
Both the tariff levels and effective dates have become moving targets. Trump said on Friday that tariffs ranging up to 70% could go into effect on August 1, levels far higher than the 10%-50% range he announced in April.
So far, the U.S. administration has a limited deal with Britain and an in-principle agreement with Vietnam.
Deals that had been anticipated with India and Japan have failed to materialize, and there have been setbacks in talks with the European Union.
World stocks are meanwhile at record highs, up 11% since April 2.
They fell 14% in three trading sessions after that announcement but have since rallied 24%.
'If Liberation Day was the earthquake, the tariff letters will be the aftershocks. They won't quite have the same impact on markets even if they are higher than the earlier 10%,' said Rong Ren Goh, a portfolio manager in the fixed income team at Eastspring Investments in Singapore.
'This financial system is so inundated with liquidity that it is hard to cash up or delever at the risk of lagging the markets, with April serving as a painful reminder for many who derisked and were then forced to chase the relentless recovery in the subsequent weeks.'
Taxes and the FED
Investors have also been distracted by weeks of wrangling in Congress over Trump's massive tax and spending package, which he signed into law on Friday.
Stock markets have celebrated the passage of the bill, which makes Trump's 2017 tax cuts permanent, while bond investors are wary the measures could add more than $3 trillion to the nation's $36.2 trillion debt.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq indexes closed at record highs on Friday, notching a third week of gains. Europe's STOXX 600 benchmark is up 9% in three months.
Musk announces forming of 'America Party' in further break from Trump
But the risks of tariff-related inflation have weighed on U.S. Treasuries and the dollar, and jostled expectations for Federal Reserve policy.
Rate futures show traders no longer expect a Fed rate cut this month and are pricing in a total of just two quarter-point reductions by year-end.
The dollar has suffered a knock to its haven reputation from the dithering on tariffs.
The dollar index , which reflects the U.S. currency's performance against a basket of six others, has had its worst first half of the year since 1973, declining some 11%. It has fallen by 6.6% since April 2 alone.
'The markets are discounting a return to tariff levels of 35%, 40% or higher, and anticipating an across-the-board level of 10% or so,' said John Pantekidis, chief investment officer at TwinFocus in Boston.
Pantekidis is cautiously optimistic about the outlook for U.S. stocks this year, but the one variable he is watching closely is interest rate levels.
For now he expects to see interest rates dip in the second half, 'but if the bond market worries about the impact of the bill and rates go up, that's a different scenario.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

South African rand steady on hopes for further trade talks with the US
South African rand steady on hopes for further trade talks with the US

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

South African rand steady on hopes for further trade talks with the US

JOHANNESBURG: The South African rand was steady on Tuesday, buoyed by hopes the country could still salvage a less damaging trade deal with the United States after President Donald Trump extended a tariff deadline to August 1. Trump informed Pretoria and more than a dozen other trading partners of sharply higher trade levies in a wave of letters sent out on Monday. South Africa is facing a 30% trade tariff on its exports to the U.S., but the extended deadline has opened a window for further negotiations. At 1351 GMT, the rand traded at 17.8150 against the dollar , up roughly 0.3% on Monday's close, seemingly clawing back some of its losses after falling well over 1%. The risk-sensitive currency was already reeling after Trump threatened an additional 10% tariff on any country aligning with what he called the 'Anti-American policies' of the BRICS group of big emerging markets, which South Africa is a member of. The U.S. is South Africa's second-largest bilateral trading partner after China. In addition to minerals, car parts and other manufactured goods, South Africa exports agricultural products to the U.S. and stands to lose about 35,000 jobs in the citrus industry if the tariffs take effect. South African rand falls, US bill and tariff updates in focus South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said the 30% tariff rate is not an accurate representation of available trade data, though negotiations between the two nations will continue. Ramaphosa also urged South African companies to diversify their customer base beyond the U.S. 'While strategically sound, this is not an easy shift to make in the short term,' said George Herman, Chief Investment Officer at Citadel. 'It's difficult to see what bargaining power South Africa holds, especially given U.S. President Donald Trump's negatively biased view…' Trump confronted Ramaphosa earlier this year with false claims of white genocide and land seizures and has criticised South Africa's genocide court case against Israel. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange's Top-40 index was last up 0.2%. South Africa's benchmark 2035 government bond was weaker, as the yield rose 5.5 basis points to 9.88%.

Wall St steadies as investors focus on trade talks after latest tariff shock
Wall St steadies as investors focus on trade talks after latest tariff shock

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

Wall St steadies as investors focus on trade talks after latest tariff shock

Wall Street's main indexes largely held firm on Tuesday, as jitters over President Donald Trump's latest tariff offensive were offset by mounting hopes that fresh talks with U.S. trading partners could avert a full-blown global tariff war. On Monday, Trump warned partners from Japan and South Korea to smaller players that steep new U.S. tariffs would kick in from Aug. 1 — though he left the door open to delays if countries come forward with fresh proposals. Japan's top trade negotiator, Ryosei Akazawa, held a 40-minute phone call with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, where the two sides agreed to 'actively' continue negotiations. At 09:57 a.m. the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 33.58 points, or 0.08%, to 44,372.78, the S&P 500 gained 6.03 points, or 0.10%, to 6,236.25 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 37.51 points, or 0.18%, to 20,450.02. The sentiment has improved since a knee-jerk reaction on Monday, when all major indexes closed sharply lower following the tariff announcement. In S&P 500 sub-sectors, the energy index led the pack with a 1% rise, while utilities dropped 1.3%. In mega-cap stocks, shares of Tesla gained 1.5% after the stock recorded its steepest single-day fall in nearly a month on Monday. Wall St knocked lower by tariff jitters 'The market's taking comfort from the fact that the can has been kicked further down the road and the expectation remains that the bark is a lot worse than the bite,' said Ben Laidler, head of equity strategy at Bradesco BBI. The swift market recovery is in stark contrast to the sharp selloff that followed 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements three months ago — a rout that plunged the Nasdaq into bear territory and sent the Dow and S&P 500 into correction. Since then, Wall Street has rebounded, with the Nasdaq and S&P 500 both notching record highs last week, buoyed by a robust labor market that helped quiet recession worries. 'We have not seen any dramatic economic consequences from big increase in tariffs,' Laidler added. The U.S. has so far reached trade agreements with only Britain and Vietnam. BofA Global Research and Goldman Sachs raised their year-end targets for the S&P 500 index, broadly driven by reduced policy uncertainty, resilient corporate earnings and potential interest rate cuts. Traders have now all but ruled out a July rate cut from the Federal Reserve, putting the odds of a September cut at around 63%, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Minutes of the Fed's June rate-setting meeting are scheduled for release on Wednesday, which will offer investors more clarity on when the central bank might resume its policy easing cycle. Shares of solar stocks fell after Trump on Monday directed federal agencies to strengthen provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that repeal or modify tax credits for solar and wind energy projects. SunRun dropped 8.9%, Enphase Energy lost 4.6% and SolarEdge Technologies declined 4.2%. Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.57-to-1 ratio on the NYSE, and by a 2.17-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq. The S&P 500 posted 15 new 52-week highs and three new lows, while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 47 new highs and 26 new lows.

Wheat steady-down 5 cents, corn down 1-4, soy mixed
Wheat steady-down 5 cents, corn down 1-4, soy mixed

Business Recorder

time2 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Wheat steady-down 5 cents, corn down 1-4, soy mixed

CHICAGO: The following are U.S. expectations for the resumption of grain and soy complex trading at the Chicago Board of Trade at 8:30 a.m. CDT (1330 GMT) on Tuesday. Wheat - Steady to down 5 cents per bushel CBOT wheat eased as the U.S. winter wheat harvest progressed faster than expected last week, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data, and traders focused on large incoming supplies from Northern Hemisphere crops. Commodities markets faced pressure from ongoing uncertainty over the results of U.S. tariff policy. Powerhouse Asian economies Japan and South Korea said on Tuesday they would try to negotiate with the U.S. to soften the impact of sharply higher tariffs that President Donald Trump now plans to impose from the start of August. News on Friday that Russia will cut its wheat export tax to zero underscored stiff expected competition from Black Sea supplies as the 2025/26 season gets under way. CBOT September soft red winter wheat was last down 4 cents to $5.44-1/2 per bushel. K.C. September hard red winter wheat was last down 5-1/2 cents to $5.22 per bushel. Minneapolis September wheat was last down 6 cents to $6.31-1/4 a bushel. Wheat falls more than 3% on supply pressure; corn, soybeans drop Corn - Down 1 to 4 cents per bushel CBOT corn fell on improved U.S. crop ratings and forecasts of more benign weather in the Midwest corn belt. The U.S. Department of Agriculture rated 74% of the nation's corn crop in good to excellent condition, up 1 percentage point from last week and the highest for this time of year since 2018, a weekly USDA crop progress report showed on Monday. July is the month when most of the U.S. corn crop begins pollination, its key reproductive phase, which is crucial for determining yield. Drier but mild weather in the U.S. Midwest is expected to limit stress concerns for the crop in the next few weeks, according to Commodity Weather Group. CBOT December corn was last down 3 cents to $4.17-3/4 per bushel. Soybeans - Up 2 to down 7 cents per bushel CBOT soybean futures headed downward as favorable U.S. crop conditions created supply pressure while uncertainty over the outcome of Washington's tariff-based negotiations with trading partners worldwide weighed on demand sentiment. Non-threatening weather is expected in the U.S. Midwest in the coming weeks, according to forecasters. CBOT November soybeans were last down 3-1/4 cents to $10.17-1/2 per bushel.

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