By Peter Tchir of Academy Securities
For anyone who has been reading the T-Report for the past few months, you know that we have become increasingly concerned about the administration’s tariff policy and its impact on markets and the economy.
As recently as Thursday on Bloomberg TV, I was bearish on the economy and thought that we had evolved from a Trade War to an Economic War with China. That fits the D.I.M.E. framework for levers of power (Diplomacy, Information, Military, and Economic).
We discussed this briefly on Wednesday and in more detail on Thursday morning when we reviewed the Liberation Day Do-Over. The argument was that the pause and reduced rate was good, but probably not good enough to get us back to pre-Rose Garden levels. This also seemed to fit with the escalation of the Trade War to an Economic War with China.
Then, Friday night, we got some major exemptions:
The fact that China was included in the exemptions makes this quite powerful indeed. It certainly seems to ratchet down the full Economic War with China (for now).
Had 10% “reciprocal” tariffs, with 90 days to negotiate, and exemptions for vital/expensive tech been excluded from the initial Liberation Day announcement, we probably all could have been saved a lot of time and suffering!
But they weren’t.
Before moving on to analyzing where I think we are and where we are headed, I want to thank management here at Academy for supporting the macro analysis we supply. I can guarantee that not everyone in management, or every employee, agreed with my take. I’m sure that many of our clients did not either. But the decision was made that the views were generated based on information at hand and by applying logic, as I saw it, to analyze the potential outcome. Provocative? Yes. But intentionally one-sided? No! It was this freedom that probably helped get Academy Securities quoted on the front page of the weekend edition of the FT.
So, let’s move on and figure out what we’ve learned and where this might all be headed.
What We’ve Learned
Here is what I think we’ve learned. It is based on my assessments coming into this weekend, so what I think I’ve learned is based on what I had previously thought.
Bottom line is we’ve learned that all sorts of things might be said and done and even undone, which is both comforting (lower tail risk) and concerning (difficult to see how this is helpful long term). I think we have learned that China was ready to move this from a Trade War to an Economic War, so we better understand what hand they think they have.
Deals
Next on the slate must be the finalization of some deals. My first question is whether these will be tariff deals or comprehensive trade deals? I think we are going to see “trade” deals, which may be trickier to negotiate than we believe, but let’s go through the various steps.
Reduced or eliminated tariffs. This will be relatively easy, and I think it could have been achieved without the Liberation Day process as executed. Many of the tariffs are quite small and are not the primary reason the U.S. isn’t selling goods into that country. I’ve spent a lot of time over the past month examining tariffs, and I am not convinced that even if every country in the world reduced their tariffs to 0, that we would see a surge in U.S. exports.
For small tariffs, it seems unlikely that they are the differential between selling some and selling a lot. At the margin, it was a bit helpful, but only a bit.
Tariffs with low GDP per capita nations can be reduced to zero, but the spending power of those nations is still low. The rich are likely paying up to get the American items already. Plus, many of the American Brands aren’t made in the U.S., so they aren’t impacted – the tariffs are based on where things are made, not where the corporate headquarters are domiciled.
Non-tariff barriers are real. At the “cannot do anything about it” level of non-tariff barriers, is taste or consumer preferences. If for whatever reason things made in the U.S. don’t resonate with consumers in other countries, that can only be fixed by developing products for those markets – which presumably would have occurred if someone thought the demand was worth it. Then you do have rules on things, whether it is emissions, GMO, etc., that are true deterrents to trade, but can you really force countries to change those? This could be difficult to negotiate.
Currency control and manipulation. I have no idea how to determine the amount a currency is undervalued due to manipulation. That is a problem that I just haven’t spent much time on. Maybe it is easy to determine, but I suspect that it is far more difficult to determine an appropriate “level” of manipulation. Currency controls are easier to see, and China does that. But you know who else has tight controls on their currency? India! If the administration is looking closely at currency controls, India, who I think should be a country we work closely with (a long running theme of T-Reports), should come under scrutiny. They might not (probably won’t), because it isn’t pragmatic, but something to watch.
All in all, I think tariffs will be reduced dramatically, and that could have been achieved without the angst of the past two weeks, and it won’t do much to spur American manufacturing.
Which leads me to import quotas.
I suspect we will see import quotas playing a large role in trade negotiations. The President still strongly believes in balanced trade, and forcing countries to buy U.S. goods fits into that view extremely well.
If we just wanted lower tariffs, the President could have given that to Israel as Netanyahu sat in the oval office. Israel had already agreed to eliminate all tariffs on U.S. goods.
So, if we get back to the first principle – more manufacturing in the U.S. – it is reasonable to assume that the administration will try to force the buying of American goods.
Quotas are likely going to be more difficult for countries to accept. Countries may have to change what they consume to meet quotes. This just seems more difficult than reducing tariffs (since I don’t think that will change the trade balance much, but quotas will).
The quotas are likely to have “teeth” to them. From all of our sources who worked with Trump 1.0, it is quite widely accepted that the President is angry that Xi never followed through on buying U.S. agriculture the way he had supposedly committed to do. So, for anyone thinking that countries will just agree to quotas and not honor them, I think you have another thing coming. Quotas are likely to be part of any trade deal and countries will face repercussions if they don’t live up to their obligations.
I believe import quotas, with penalties for violating them (which is completely appropriate if they agree to them), will play an important role in trade deals and may slow things down.
Restricting trade with China. There are 100s if not 1,000s of stories about how China uses loopholes in international trade to get around existing rules and regulations. The administration needs to stop that if the tariffs against China are going to be effective.
Basically, I’m at:
Given that this is my speculation (which I view is logical from what we’ve heard from the administration and what we can infer as being required to achieve their stated goals – which I believe are still their goals), I think trade deals are going to take longer to achieve with some of the most important trading partners!
I hope I’m wrong, but the more bells and whistles these trade deals try to incorporate, the more difficult it will be for richer, larger countries to agree to them.
The Economy and Risk Assets
I still think we have a high risk of recession, for a number of reasons, but I can dial back my concerns based on what we know of the policy adjustments.
I can also be comfortable, that for now, the lows are in for stocks and the wides are in for credit spreads, as the economic slowdown I fear will take longer to play out, and might be preempted by rapid policy “realignment” like we’ve just seen.
Rates and the Dollar
I expect, near-term, for rates to do well, and that should help the dollar. We should see inflation expectations drop, and the economic outlook to improve (kind of a wash).
The U.S. is in the process of passing a very large increase in the debt ceiling. There is already talk about a much greater military spending budget (from $800 billion to $1 trillion). If I’m correct on pivoting to domestic growth (see next section), then we could see pressure on the deficit to increase (it would not be the first time an administration with the best of intentions on the deficit decides they need to spend now, to make it better later).
Here's the bigger play at hand, and why there is only token pushback to DOGE.
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) February 8, 2025
You cut enough spending - even if it's all grift and fraud - you eventually get a recession, guaranteed. That's all Congress is waiting for cause then they use the "emergency" to vote through a far…
There are 3 things that have not changed that may put ongoing pressure on bond yields:
Supposedly this sort of tax has been implemented before, as a way to reduce trade deficits. If taxes force holders to reduce their exposure, it should help the trade with nations of those holders. This would not be limited to Treasuries and would not be limited to central banks. How real is the risk? I have no idea, but it is out there, and once again leaves me in the position of if you don’t need exposure to U.S. Treasuries (and it could encompass more than just Treasuries), then why keep your existing exposure?
I just see lots of reasons for countries, insurance companies, and pension funds in other countries to reduce their exposure to the U.S. Some mechanisms raise money for the U.S. (the fees, unlike tariffs, would be paid by foreigners) and allegedly help on trade balances, so why wouldn’t the administration consider it? Especially now that the tariff fees that they were relying on will be much lower and will start much later?
The basis trade and leveraged exposure played a role in driving yields higher, but the combination of higher yields and dollar weakness seems to point the finger to foreign net selling of Treasuries.
what if pic.twitter.com/34mLPz8FAC
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) April 11, 2025
I’ve been told that the indirect bids at the auctions throw cold water on the theory that foreigners are selling. Yes, it does make you question the theory, but let’s toss out a couple of other things:
Yes indirect bids typically indicate foreign interest, but these were no ordinary auctions and the price action after the auctions seems to fit the foreign selling narrative.
I believe the Fed will provide temporary support as needed, but QE isn’t coming and the trend of foreigners selling U.S. bonds isn’t over, even after all the recent tariff concessions. If anything, some fears of foreign holders may escalate as this administration goes through their list of ways to reduce the deficit and the two methods above get traction.
Pivot to Domestic Production for Domestic Security
I’m tired of writing, and you are probably tired of reading.
It suffices to say, I’d love to see a pivot towards domestic production of things required for domestic security (I’d love “Fortress North America” chatter to pick up again, but I think that ship may have sailed).
At least two cabinet members mentioned U.S. shipbuilding. Put in a massive order for ships that will take years to fill, but also give time for the shipyards to retool and domestic sources of steel and other materials to be developed.
There is a lot to be done that would achieve many of the policy goals that don’t come at the expense of global relations. Yes, it will hurt the deficit for a bit, but the path to success is much clearer than some of the things that have already been tried.
Bottom Line
I am all in for Make America Great Again. But my starting point was that America Is Already Pretty Darn Good, and not everyone has been picking on us even though everyone is jealous of America Exceptionalism.
I think there is a lot we can do that creates a smoother path to achieve the goals of:
China remains the country we have to compete with, and even if that competition was slightly dialed back by Friday’s tariff exemptions, it is real competition and I don’t think it will be easy to win. Definitely winnable, but not necessarily easily winnable.
I cannot believe Liberation Day was only April 2nd!
It feels like a lifetime ago, but hopefully, we don’t have to respond to every headline as dramatically as we have had to recently and will be able to make better assessments of the range of likely outcomes for the economy, which impacts both Wall Street and Main Street. For the first time in weeks, I’m optimistic about the outlook for the economy and markets, but it is tempered slightly by all the messiness it took to get here.
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