Fortune | FORTUNE 07月01日
This summer will be decisive for the economy and Wall Street 
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本文探讨了今夏及未来几个月内可能影响美国经济和金融市场的关键因素。文章聚焦于特朗普政府的财政政策、关税政策、债务上限问题、美联储的利率决策以及中东地缘政治局势。这些因素相互交织,共同塑造着市场前景,投资者需密切关注相关进展,以应对可能出现的波动。文章强调了税收、贸易、债务等政策对市场的影响,以及美联储在复杂环境下的货币政策选择。

🏛️ **“One Big Beautiful Bill”:** 预计特朗普的税收减免和支出计划将在7月4日前由国会通过,但两院的意见分歧以及共和党内部分议员的反对,使得具体实施时间和内容存在不确定性。该法案将对经济和股市产生影响,同时债券市场将关注其对美国债务的影响,可能导致国债收益率上升和美元承压。

💰 **债务上限:** 美国财政部预计,除非提高债务上限,否则到夏末将无法支付账单。未能提高债务上限可能引发全球金融危机。财政部正在采取特别的现金管理措施以避免违约,但国会需要在8月休会前解决债务上限问题。

🤝 **关税与贸易协议:** 90天关税暂停期将于7月9日到期,届时关税可能回升至引发股市抛售的水平。虽然美国已与英国和中国达成协议,但其他贸易谈判仍在进行中。关税政策的变化将直接影响市场,并可能影响通货膨胀和美联储的利率决策。

🏦 **美联储的利率决策:** 美联储将密切关注关税对通货膨胀的影响,以决定是否降息。如果即将公布的数据显示关税影响是暂时的,且没有推高消费者的通胀预期,那么秋季可能降息。然而,特朗普可能通过各种方式干预,使美联储的决策更加复杂。

💼 **企业盈利:** 从7月开始,第二季度财报将陆续公布,反映关税和经济不确定性对企业利润和前景的影响。由于企业此前囤积进口商品以应对关税,第一季度的业绩未能充分反映关税影响。未来企业盈利将受到关税、投资、招聘以及财政政策等多重因素的影响。

🌍 **中东局势:** 中东地区的停火协议使得油价下降。然而,如果冲突再次爆发,油价可能飙升,从而影响消费者支出、通货膨胀以及美联储的利率决策。

If you followed the seasonal investing advice of “sell in May and go away,” you may want to reconsider because the outlook for the economy and financial markets will likely be determined in the coming months.

Several major events, datasets, progress reports, and deals are due this summer. By fall, the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs and fiscal policies should be clearer, giving the Federal Reserve enough confidence to act on interest rates.

Here’s a look at the factors that will tip the scales:

“One Big Beautiful Bill”

A key piece could come as soon as this week. Trump has set a July 4 deadline for Congress to pass his so-called One Big Beautiful Bill, which contains his tax cuts and spending priorities.

While the House of Representatives passed one version of the legislation and the Senate advanced a separate one, the GOP’s narrow majorities in both chambers make the timing of the eventual package and its exact provisions less certain.

All the congressional logrolling that’s needed could push the timeline past July 4, especially now that a few Republicans have announced they will not seek reelection, making them less susceptible to Trump’s arm-twisting.

Wall Street expects the tax cuts to juice the economy and the stock market, while the bond market will watch the bill’s impact on U.S. debt. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated the Senate’s version of the bill will add nearly $3.3 trillion to deficits over a decade.

More fiscal sticker shock could send Treasury yields higher and add more pressure on the dollar, which is already down 10% this year, its worst first-half performance in more than 50 years.

Debt ceiling

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has estimated that the U.S. will no longer be able to pay its bills by mid- to late summer, unless the debt ceiling is raised.

While he has vowed that the U.S. will never default, it’s up to Congress to raise the debt limit so that the Treasury Department can issue fresh bonds to service interest expenses and maturities.

The Big Beautiful Bill would increase the debt ceiling by trillions of dollars. In the meantime, the Treasury Department has been using its extraordinary cash management measures to avoid default.

Bessent said last week he extended his department’s authority to use those extraordinary measures to July 24, in an apparent reminder for Congress to raise the debt ceiling before its typical August recess.

Failure to raise the debt limit and prevent a U.S. default would spark a global financial meltdown.

Tariffs and trade deals

Trump administration officials have been saying since “Liberation Day” in April that major trade deals are imminent. So far, the U.S. has reached agreements with the U.K. and China, while negotiations with other top trade partners continue.

Meanwhile, the 90-day pause on Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs will expire on July 9, after which they would spike back to levels that triggered an epic stock market selloff.

Bessent has signaled flexibility on that deadline, saying a dozen or so trade deals could be reached by Labor Day. But over the weekend, Trump reiterated his desire to dispense with any further talks and unilaterally set a tariff rate on each country.

A sudden return to high tariffs would deliver another jolt to Wall Street, which had been expecting duties to eventually settle at 10% for most countries and 30% for China—manageable levels that could largely be absorbed without too much pain.

Federal Reserve

Tariffs and their impact on inflation will heavily influence the central bank as it weighs whether to trim interest rates. Pricing data so far hasn’t revealed a big impact from tariffs, and a few Fed officials have said that’s evidence that inflation is tame enough to justify rate cuts.

But Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and other policymakers have indicated they need at least a few more months of data to be confident that inflation is indeed on the right track.

If the upcoming data show that any tariff-related inflation effects are only one-offs that aren’t raising consumers’ inflation expectations over the longer run, then rate cuts could come in the fall.

While Trump has demanded the Fed lower rates immediately, he could also make it harder for policymakers to do that. They may more reluctant to cut just to prove to markets that they are independent from political pressure. Re-escalation of tariffs could muddy the inflation picture. The naming of a “shadow” Fed chair could even stir a revolt on the Federal Open Market Committee.

Corporate earnings

Starting in July, earnings reports for the second quarter will start coming out, giving Wall Street a more fulsome view of how tariffs—and the economic uncertainty they’ve caused—are affecting profits as well as the outlook for profits.

Because companies rushed to stock up on imports earlier in the year to get ahead of tariffs, first-quarter results didn’t fully reflect higher rates.

But those stockpiles are being exhausted, forcing companies to hike prices on consumers or eat tariff costs and shrink profit margins.

Also factoring into earnings will be how much or how little companies plan to invest and hire in an economy that is slowing amid Trump’s trade war.

The White House’s fiscal policies will sway earnings too, as tax cuts, the end of certain tax credits, more spending on defense, and less spending on the social safety net ripple through corporate America and consumers.

Wild card: The Middle East

A tenuous ceasefire has taken hold between Israel, Iran, and the U.S., sending oil prices lower as markets worry less about a sudden supply disruption.

But Trump has said he is open to bombing Iran again if it’s necessary to cripple Tehran’s nuclear program. That’s as conflicting reports emerge over how much Iran’s capabilities have actually been damaged.

Renewed fighting could set off another surge in crude prices, sapping consumers of spending power, reigniting inflation, and further complicating the outlook for Fed rate cuts and the economy.

Have a great summer.

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经济展望 金融市场 特朗普政府 关税 美联储
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