Just how “full” and how “comprehensive” is the trade framework with the UK that President Donald Trump announced today? At this point, the president’s debut trade agreement is more about the hype than the substance, as Bloomberg’s Catherine Lucey and Josh Wingrove report in this analysis of the deal: Trump’s Scant UK Deal Shows Limits of Frenzied Trade Strategy As he’s faced declining poll numbers and jittery financial markets because of uncertainty over his trade policy, Trump has been eager to show some results from his wide-ranging trade war. For weeks he’s been touting talks with multiple countries and promising imminent deals. However, after the carefully staged announcement ceremony in the Oval Office, which included a call-in from UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, it was clear that what Trump was presenting was something less than a full-fledged trade agreement. The US will get increased market access and a faster customs process for exports to the UK, while the UK will get limited tariff relief on autos, steel and aluminum. But some of the bigger trade issues were pushed off. The UK will maintain its digital services tax hitting major US tech firms, and Trump’s plans for sweeping pharmaceutical tariff were left for later. And Trump is keeping his baseline tariff of 10% on UK goods. As Starmer noted, the two sides still need to “finish ironing out some of the details.” Nonetheless, the agreement — along with Trump saying tariffs on China could be lowered if talks this weekend go well — cheered Wall Street. The S&P 500 rallied as much as 1.5% in the immediate aftermath before subsiding some in the last stretch of trading. Read: Trump Says ‘Substantive’ China Talks Could Yield Tariff Cut And Trump now has gotten the ball rolling on bringing other nations to the negotiating table, something he’s said his tariff plan is designed to do. The administration has promoted talks with India, Japan and South Korea. Almost everyone, though, wants to see what happens with China after talks this weekend in Switzerland led by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer with Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng. “I hope the UK agreement will be the first of many,” Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey told reporters. “Whatever transpires between the US and China will be an important part of this story.” — Joe Sobczyk |