Fortune | FORTUNE 13小时前
White knuckles and ‘massive unknowns’ ahead of Trump’s July 9th tariff deadline
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距离特朗普政府对大规模贸易关税实施90天冻结的截止日期仅剩一周,但其“90天内达成90项协议”的目标远未实现。尽管政府宣布与中国、英国等国家达成新贸易协议,但细节匮乏,引发市场担忧。专家认为,投资者已习惯特朗普的“贸易反复”策略,即市场在关税威胁时下跌,暂停时反弹,但这种模式难以持久。关税截止日期可能导致消费品价格上涨,但专家预计特朗普可能再次让步,并继续与主要贸易伙伴进行谈判。文章还探讨了与中国的贸易关系,以及可能通过贸易协议将其他国家纳入美国贸易轨道。

⚠️ 90天关税冻结期即将到期,特朗普政府未能实现其“90天内达成90项协议”的目标,引发市场对贸易政策不确定性的担忧。

📉 市场对特朗普的贸易策略已形成“TACO”模式,即在关税威胁时下跌,暂停时反弹。专家警告这种模式难以持久,并预计关税截止日期可能导致消费品价格上涨。

🤝 特朗普政府已宣布与中国、英国等国家达成新贸易协议,但协议细节匮乏,市场对其实际影响持观望态度。专家预计谈判将持续进行,最终结果仍不确定。

🇨🇳 中国是美国重要的贸易伙伴,占美国进口的37.6%。未来贸易协议可能旨在限制中国在其他国家供应链中的资本流动,以巩固美国在贸易中的地位。

The countdown to the 90-day freeze on sweeping Liberation Day tariffs expires next week, and President Donald Trump’s administration is a far cry from its “90 deals in 90 days” goal.

Trump’s self-imposed July 9 deadline follows his sweeping reciprocal tariffs address in April, which sparked global panic and caused the S&P to shed $5 trillion in value in about two days. As next week’s deadline approaches, the Trump administration has announced new trade agreements with countries including China, the U.K., Vietnam and Indonesia—but details about these agreements are scant, and no word of further deals being made yet has left U.S. consumers and investors with little clarity.

Investors have grown accustomed to the “TACO,” or Trump Always Chickens Out trade, where markets fall when Trump announces steep tariffs on imports and then jump back up when he pauses them. But experts say this pattern can’t last forever.

“Time’s ticking to get deal frameworks in place,” Wedbush Securities Senior Equity Research Analyst Dan Ives told Fortune. “Even though the market has shrugged it off, for businesses that operate every day, there’s massive unknowns and a lot of white knuckles. It’s a key week and a key few months ahead [for] tariffs.”

Economists already expect current tariff rates to increase costs on consumer goods this summer—these prices could increase further after July 9. Pantheon Macroeconomics economists wrote in a note on Thursday that there is an “imminent risk” of a temporary jump in tariffs rates across the board as the deadline nears. If imposed, reciprocal rates could boost consumer prices from tariffs to 1.5% from 1% under the current tariff rates, they wrote. 

But experts are skeptical that Trump will maintain any reciprocal rates imposed next week, as he’s lowered rates in the past as talks with trade partners have continued. Trump and China formalized a rare earth deal in June, after Trump briefly charged 125% duties on Chinese imports in April.

“In the end, however, we expect any ratcheting-up of the tariffs to be short-lived. Other countries will respond forcefully; they all saw Mr. Trump fold to pressure from China in May,” the Pantheon economists wrote. “The weaker economic backdrop compared to April and the further decline in the president’s approval rating since then also suggest an eventual climbdown is likely.”

Some experts even anticipate little change as the deadline approaches, as current pacts with major trade partners still need to be refined.

“So far we have a tiny number of agreements which are themselves not very detailed,” UBS Chief Economist Paul Donovan told Fortune in an email Thursday. “The Chinese ‘agreement’ is simply a partial de-escalation of an unsustainable deal. The UK ‘agreement’ is partially implemented with plenty of disagreement on the outstanding details. The deadline is likely to serve as a point from which further extensions or continuation of negotiations will be announced.”

Trump’s credibility in question

Markets have grown accustomed to Trump walking back on extreme tariffs threats. Now, experts say Trump’s next moves will inform whether countries in negotiations with the U.S. have a similar mentality.

“[Trump] certainly doesn’t want to be accused of chickening out because it would hurt his credibility in any future negotiations,” Thierry Wizman, Macquarie Group financial markets economist, told Fortune. “The focus is always on showing that he can in fact cut you off.”

Wizman does expect some deals to be announced, though, which he says will be touted by the administration.

“Trump can always come out and say, ‘We have a deal,’ but it will be a deal that’s very narrow in scope. So they’ll segregate the things that they have agreed on and say that’s a deal like with China,” Wizman said. “There’s a whole bunch of ways this can go right, and it’s also a whole bunch of ways it can be spun.”

Experts say to expect continued talks past July 9 with many major trading partners like the EU.

“The deadline is probably not going to change very much—mostly the status quo will be retained while negotiations continue with more or less vigour depending on the importance of the bilateral relationship,” UBS’ Donovan wrote, “Uncertainty about the ultimate outcome will persist. If there is any attempt to escalate, investors are likely to shrug their shoulders and wait for U.S. President Trump to retreat.”

Trade with China

China accounts for about 37.6% of U.S. imports this year, according to supply chain intelligence platform project44. This is a 0.1% increase from 2024.

Still, Wizman says whatever trade agreements to come in the near future may look to lock out China from moving capital in and out of other countries’ supply chains. He says this may be a focus in trade agreements with countries like Japan, South Korea and the EU.

“If you can get these countries to depend on bilateral trade with the U.S. and depend less on China, then you basically bolt these countries into the U.S. orbit permanently,” Wizman said.

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特朗普 贸易关税 中美贸易 经济
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