By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) โ TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
Highest U.S. tariffs in over 100 years slam markets
On March 7, U.S. Treasury Scott Bessent said the U.S. economy could be in for a โdetox periodโ as it adjusted to President Donald Trumpโs transformative policy agenda. The gyrations on Wall Street and beyond on April 3 following Trumpโs sweeping global tariffs the day before suggest that may be a huge understatement.
U.S. stocks, the dollar and oil cratered on Thursday, bond yields plunged and volatility soared, as Trumpโs tariffs at a stroke darkened the near-term outlook for spending, investment, corporate earnings, economic activity and growth.
Trumpโs tariffs on China are among the highest. Will Beijing risk devaluing the yuan? See below for more, but first, a round up of todayโs remarkable moves on world markets.
Iโd love to hear from you, so please reach out to me with comments at jamie.mcgeever@thomsonreuters.com. You can also follow me at @ReutersJamie and @reutersjamie.bsky.social.
Todayโs Key Market Moves
Trump is on fire, global markets tariffied
One should never read too much into a single dayโs trading in financial markets, but some days are so dramatic itโs difficult not to. Thursday is one of them.
Declines of more than 4% on Wall Street and near-2% swings in the dollar donโt come around too often, and outside of major crises like the Global Financial Crisis or the pandemic, they are even rarer.
So it is a measure of investorsโ shock at the severity of Trumpโs tariffs, trepidation over the damage theyโll inflict โ and, no little disbelief at how they were calculated โ that markets gyrated as much as they did on Thursday.
Economist David Beckworth posted on social media platform X that Trumpโs latest salvo in his global trade war may be โone of the biggest unforced economic policy errors in US historyโ โ a bold claim, perhaps, but one which seems to be resonating.
Analysts are ratcheting down their U.S. growth forecasts, and sub-1% expansion this year is now in view, while recession risks have risen sharply. Rates traders are now pricing in almost 100 basis points of Fed cuts this year and 150 bps by the middle of next year.
As economist Rebecca Harding states, โnobody wins from the trade war.โ Itโs a simple but important point โ the economic and market outlook everywhere is suddenly bleaker, especially in some of the Asian countries that have been hit with the heaviest duties.
Whatโs more, policymakers find themselves in an even tighter spot. Will the Bank of Japan be so keen to continue with its rate-hiking campaign? Will the European Central Bank or Bank of England be forced to cut rates more than planned if the euro and sterling continue rising? And how does powerhouse China respond?
Part of the problem for everyone โ investors, households, businesses and policymakers โ is Trumpโs propensity to change course in the blink of an eye. Some tariffs may be lowered, exempted, or postponed within days, should countries come to the negotiating table and strike a deal with โTariff Manโ.
Of course if they are maintained, or countries retaliate, the economic and market outlook could darken even more, stoking volatility and uncertainty โ good for gold, bonds and short sellers; not so good for stocks, credit and other risky assets.
If investors are hoping a sense of calm might descend on markets on Friday, think again โ the latest U.S. payrolls will be released at 8:30 ET, and a few hours later Fed Chair Jerome Powell delivers a speech on the economic outlook.
Stock futures around the world are pointing to heavy losses at the open. Buckle up.
What next in world trade war? Watch the yuan
Whatโs the most important exchange rate in the world right now? Probably dollar/yuan.
How Beijing responds to the eye-popping tariffs the Trump administration slapped on Chinese exports to the U.S. will be critical not only for China, but also for its โplus oneโ trading partners in Asia, and world markets more broadly.
The total tariff rate on U.S. imported goods from China is now a whopping 54%. If maintained for a reasonable length of time, this will be a financial hit to Beijing that will likely hinder its efforts to address its lingering real estate crisis, boost consumption, build its military might, and fund its myriad investments.
And, unlike in the first Trump trade war, China canโt rely on funneling exports and investment through โplus oneโ countries in Asia to mitigate the tariff shock because those nations have also been hit with punitive levies. In some cases, like Vietnam, the tariffs are even higher than Chinaโs.
That leaves currency devaluation as perhaps the most powerful weapon China can wield as it looks to respond to Washingtonโs latest salvo. But unfortunately for Beijing, that strategy is fraught with risk.
LIMITED ROOM TO MANEUVER
A rapid fall in the yuanโs value could trigger huge capital flight as international and domestic investors pull money out of the country, slamming domestic asset prices and stoking financial market volatility.
And beyond Chinaโs borders, a tumbling yuan could force other Asian countries to let their currencies fall in order to maintain competitiveness, potentially sparking a โbeggar-thy-neighborโ FX devaluation war, the last thing any of them need.
Moreover, currency devaluation runs counter to the sweep of reforms and stimulus measures Beijing has announced since September, as it seeks to reflate the economy via domestic consumption rather than exports.
And Chinaโs room for further policy stimulus is already fading. Further interest rate cuts and liquidity provisions will probably come, but a major fiscal boost will involve issuing more bonds, which will strain an already widening budget deficit.
Indeed, Fitch downgraded Chinaโs credit rating on Thursday by one notch to โAโ, citing a deterioration in the public finances as Beijing scrambles to shore up tariff-hit growth.
โEverything now depends on China,โ says Robin Brooks, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, warning that a meaningful devaluation of the yuan could begin a global โrisk-offโ downward spiral that could slam emerging markets and, if it persists, tank the U.S. economy as well.
ALL EYES ON CHINA
Beijing has previously said it wonโt go down the FX depreciation road, preferring to keep the yuan relatively โstableโ. But that was before Trumpโs self-styled โLiberation Dayโ.
Beijingโs first response might be to try and negotiate with Washington to get the tariffs lowered. But if that fails, FX devaluation becomes a real option to offset the shock.
Analysts at Goldman Sachs are among those who believe China will continue to resist โsignificantโ FX depreciation, but they note that the combined impact of all the U.S. tariffs on China announced since Trumpโs inauguration in January could take a 1.7 percentage point bite out of Chinaโs annual growth rate. Thatโs huge.
What do the FX markets think? You should never read too much into one dayโs moves. But itโs worth noting that dollar/yuan on Thursday clocked its biggest spot market rise in five months, and the Peopleโs Bank of China allowed the yuan to depreciate the most in four months at the daily fixing.
Moving forward, the big level to watch for spot dollar/yuan is 7.35, and 7.25 for the central bankโs daily fixing. Breaking through those would leave the yuan at its weakest point against the U.S. dollar since the depths of the Global Financial Crisis in late 2008.
The yuan isnโt too far away from these levels right now. The world is watching.
What could move markets tomorrow?
If you have more time to read today, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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(By Jamie McGeever, editing by Nia Williams)
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