A one-day faceplant across markets certainly sends a message as to what Wall Street thinks of Donald Trump’s strategizing on global trade. Two days in a row, however, where the second day is even worse than the first, may be more of a warning that permanent damage is being done. The S&P 500 saw its worst two-day plunge in more than five years in a tariff-induced rout that torched $5 trillion in value, with the gauge down a tooth-snapping 6% on Friday after having dropped almost 5% the day before. Oh, and the Nasdaq 100? Bear market. The US administration, after having punched the world in the face, warned its victims not to punch back. The folks running the second-largest economy apparently didn’t get the memo though, retaliating against Trump’s tariffs with commensurate levies on all American goods and export controls on rare earths. China will impose a 34% tariff on all imports from the US starting April 10, matching the level of Trump’s so-called reciprocal tariffs on Chinese products. Authorities in Beijing also announced other measures, piling on as the rest of the world began to position itself for a potential economic war with America. Some nations however were simultaneously preparing to negotiate. Trump reacted to Beijing’s clap back with one of his all-caps social media posts, claiming China had “panicked.” But it wasn’t China who is being seen as the rash party. “The speed in which the counter measures were rolled out shows a high level of deliberation and a suite of appropriate responses to hit back at the US,” said Dylan Loh, assistant professor at the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. “It strikes the balance between inflicting some pain but not being seen as a overreaction.” —David E. Rovella |