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struggle4progress

(122,546 posts)
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 09:03 AM Saturday

Tariffs rollout and stock market mayhem

Published Sat, Apr 5 20258:27 AM EDTUpdated 26 Min Ago
Jeff Cox

Before Wednesday, President Donald Trump’s tariffs were expected to be a problem for markets and the economy, but a manageable one ...

What happened instead is something worse than the worst-case scenario, which previously had been one where the U.S. would slap true “reciprocal” duties on its trading partners that would match tariffs charged to American exports ...

If Trump was playing chicken with the rest of the world, he lost round one ...

Markets recoiled at the developments, sending stocks into a vicious two-day sell-off that put the Nasdaq Composite, home to powerhouse Silicon Valley names that Trump has been courting in the early days of his second term, into a bear market ...

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/05/how-trumps-tariffs-rollout-turned-into-stock-market-mayhem.html

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struggle4progress

(122,546 posts)
1. 'reciprocal' tariffs aren't what they seem: the real story
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 09:04 AM
Saturday

The massive tariffs that President Donald Trump announced for dozens of trading partners Wednesday were pitched as “reciprocal,” simply aiming to match the tariffs other countries charge the United States.

But the methodology behind Trump’s attempt to rebalance trade has nothing to do with the tariff rate that foreign countries impose on the US.

The Trump administration instead a grossly oversimplified calculation that it said factored in a broad set of issues such as Chinese investment, alleged currency manipulation and other countries’ regulations. The administration’s calculation divided a country’s trade deficit with the US by its exports into the country times 1/2. That’s it.

The president is essentially taking a sledgehammer to address a litany of grievances, using the trade deficit that other countries have with the US as a scapegoat. And the vague calculation could have broad implications for countries America depends on for goods — and the foreign companies that supply them ...

https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/05/business/trump-reciprocal-tariffs-real-numbers/index.html

Shermann

(8,901 posts)
2. The USA can push around any one country.
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 09:18 AM
Saturday

However, if they form coalitions they can and will win a trade war. There isn't a big pot of free money there that we can simply take, individuals and companies and countries tend to resist having their money taken without getting anything in return.

thought crime

(100 posts)
9. Tariff on commercial aircraft from US, anyone?
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 06:04 PM
Saturday

If all the tariffed countries ganged up and placed a big tariff on commercial aircraft against the US, it would immediately cripple that industry.
Trade wars can get ugly.

Random Boomer

(4,305 posts)
4. Trump has incentivized the ostracization of the U.S.
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 10:33 AM
Saturday

His tariffs are so over the top and capricious that there's no point in trying to negotiate with him. Instead, countries will just learn to do without the U.S. and carry on by keeping a wide berth.

With the stroke of a pen, he has made this country irrelevant.

IthinkThereforeIAM

(3,165 posts)
5. Most sane people want nothing to do with Trump...
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 10:52 AM
Saturday

... so in his attempt to remake the U.S. of A. in his image, the rest of the world is responding in the same way. Trump just wants to turn America into West Russia.

Ray Bruns

(5,117 posts)
8. "President Donald Trump's tariffs were expected to be a problem for markets and the economy, but a manageable one"
Sat Apr 5, 2025, 05:19 PM
Saturday

Who the fuck besides Nutlick and Navarro was thinking this?

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