Concerns
over a potential US recession this year are growing as investors assess the
impact of Trump's tariff policies.
The risks of both US and global recessions are growing as a result of uncertainty created by the trade tariffs being variously proposed, introduced and rolled back by US President Donald Trump, according to a new briefing.
GlobalData’s Tariffs and Trade Wars Executive Briefing (First Edition)
states that concerns over a potential US recession, in particular, this year
are growing as investors reassess the economic impact of the country’s new
tariff policies.
“Keen US interest in shutting backdoors to
Chinese triangulation of imports will further disrupt global supply
chains, with surging risks of US stagflation and global recession if Trump
overplays his hand,” the briefing says.
It adds: “Despite the 90-day pause on most reciprocal tariffs, the near- and
longer-term outlook is dogged by tariff uncertainty, complicating investment
and management decisions. The greatest risk is that ongoing market volatility
triggers reflexivity, sending corporate and consumer confidence plummeting,
with indications that this is already happening.”
The briefing notes “a silver lining” in that
there could be a strengthening of regional and inter-regional trade ties
outside the US. However, it maintains that the outlook remains very uncertain
and volatile – largely because the motives and agendas underlying Trump’s
policies are tangled and contradictory.
“This points to high levels of uncertainty –
a feature rather than a bug, which Trump likes to weaponise for tactical
advantage,” it says. “The outlook is further clouded by questions over which
countries will follow China in imposing retaliatory tariffs on US goods and the
timelines for potential trade negotiations with the US that could see tariffs
reduced.”
The briefing adds that any prospective
benefits of tariffs in the US would only emerge gradually, along with the tax
cuts and deregulation promised by Trump.
A key question it suggests needs
consideration when assessing the likely impact of tariffs is how high the pain
threshold is for the US administration in pursuing its goals. GlobalData’s view
is that it is “probably lower than its main trade-war opponents.”
The briefing explains: “Decades of outsized
market gains and high household exposure to equities mean negative wealth
effects will be stronger in the US. There is limited fiscal policy headroom
with dented international confidence hurting the US dollar and Treasury bond
market, while higher prices complicate the Fed’s scope to reduce interest
rates. Trump’s 9 April decision to pause most ‘reciprocal’ tariffs for 90 days
suggests that bond market turbulence prompts greater caution in tariff policy.”
By Just Style