Quarterly Outlook
Macro outlook: Trump 2.0: Can the US have its cake and eat it, too?
John J. Hardy
Chief Macro Strategist
Chief Macro Strategist
Summary: The markets were not willing to take US President Trump at his word on specific tariff threats against Mexico, Canada and China ahead of the weekend. But Trump delivered exactly what he said he would and now markets must make significant adjustments to adapt to this new reality.
US President Trump delivered on the 25% tariffs that he had previously threatened on February 1st shortly after his January 20 nomination. The market failed to take these specific threats at face value even up to the Friday close last week after countless tariff threats in his first term as president weren’t delivered on and perhaps as well after he climbed down from the threat of imposing 25% tariffs against Colombia recently. But deliver he did this time, and the markets will need to adjust quickly to this new reality and the risk of counter- moves from US trading partners, some of which have already been delivered this weekend.
Let’s review the facts in this situation, how the market is reacting and will likely react on Monday through the US session and beyond and then, what to watch for beyond the initial knee-jerk reaction.
The facts:
How the market is reacting and will react
The market reaction will be quite negative as market participants failed to take Trump’s threats seriously until he actually delivered at the weekend. And many likely believe that these tariffs could be lifted at a moment’s notice if Trump feels like his point has been made and sees trade partners responding in the desired direction. Goldman Sachs has already been out saying it sees the Mexico and Canada tariffs as likely proving short-lived.
How much the market fallout will continue to deteriorate beyond a significant correction of perhaps several percent in stock markets, for example, depends on whether the new tariffs are quickly rescinded because an agreement is reached or whether this devolves into a tit-for-tat cycle that descends into an all-out trade war. Here is what is happening so far and what may happen as Monday unfolds:
What to watch beyond the knee-jerk reaction.
This article is mostly about initial thoughts on this weekend’s dramatic announcement. There will be plenty more to consider in the days and weeks ahead. Important to note right now, though, is that if these tariff moves and counter-moves from US trade partners are sustained, we are effectively in a trade war with all of the fallout for growth and prices and disruptions to supply chains and companies that this brings. The chief longer term risk is one of stagflation: weak growth with higher inflation levels. A few specific angles on this for right now:
Companies suffering a direct hit due to production in Canada and Mexico. Car producers from Ford and especially GM, which respectively produce from 15-20% and 30-40% of their vehicles in Canada and Mexico. Volkswagen has a large Audi plant in Mexico and European carmakers are set for a rocky performance if Trump follows through with tariffs against European countries. Some apparel makers will also feel considerable impact.
Consider the impact on the biggest American brands. Already at the weekend, Canadian hockey fans were booing the singing of the US nation anthem at NHL hockey matches in Canada and social media saw widespread demands for boycotting US products, with Tesla and Amazon especially in focus. Canadian liquor stores are being asked by provincial premiers to remove all US products from liquor stores. Tesla has additional considerable risk in China and especially in Europe if Trump moves forward with tariffs against the EU. Already Musk’s brand is under siege in Denmark, for example, if we are to infer the 50% collapse in monthly Tesla Model Y sales in the country since the summer period. Tesla sold about half of its cars outside the US in 2024.