Trump
insists tariff war is ‘doing really well’ as recession fears mount
S&P 500
and Dow Jones rise sharply after extraordinarily volatile week as experts warn
of continued turbulence
Callum Jones
in New York and Helen Davidson in Taipei
Fri 11 Apr
2025 21.14 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/11/trump-tariffs-china-recession
Donald Trump
insisted his trade war with much of the world was “doing really well” despite
mounting fears of recession and as Beijing hit back and again hiked tariffs on
US exports to China.
As the US
president said his aggressive tariffs strategy was “moving along quickly”, a
closely watched economic survey revealed that US consumer expectations for
price growth had soared to a four-decade high.
The White
House maintains that the US economy is on the verge of a “golden age”, however,
and that dozens of countries – now facing a US tariff of 10% after Trump
shelved plans to impose higher rates until July – are scrambling to make deals.
“The phones
have been ringing off the hook to make deals,” the press secretary, Karoline
Leavitt, told reporters on Friday.
Beijing
raised Chinese tariffs on US products to 125% on Friday – the latest salvo of
its escalating trade dispute with Washington – and accused Trump of “unilateral
bullying and coercion”.
“Even if the
US continues to impose even higher tariffs, it would no longer have any
economic significance, and would go down as a joke in the history of world
economics,” the Chinese finance ministry said.
Few
investors were laughing. US government bonds – typically seen as one of the
world’s safest financial assets – continued to be sold off, and were on course
for their biggest weekly loss since 2019. The dollar also fell against a basket
of currencies, and was down against the euro and the pound.
Leading
stock indices paused for breath on Friday after days of torrid trading. The
FTSE 100 rose 0.6% in London. The S&P 500 increased 1.8% and the Dow Jones
industrial average gained 1.6% in New York.
The S&P
500 finished an extraordinarily volatile week for markets up 5.7%, its biggest
weekly gain since November 2023.
“We are
doing really well on our TARIFF POLICY,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social
platform. “Very exciting for America, and the World!!! It is moving along
quickly. DJT”
Some of Wall
Street’s most influential figures were unconvinced. “I think we’re very close,
if not in, a recession now,” Larry Fink, CEO of the investment giant BlackRock,
told CNBC. Far from providing certainty, the 90-day pause on higher US tariffs
on much of the world “means longer, more elevated uncertainty”, he added.
Jamie Dimon,
CEO of JPMorgan Chase, the US’s largest bank, said the world’s largest economy
was facing “considerable turbulence” as a key measure of consumer confidence
tumbled to its lowest level since the Covid-19 pandemic – and the second-lowest
level on record.
US consumer
sentiment has dropped 11% to 50.8 this month, ahead the pause announced by
Trump earlier this week, according to a regularly survey compiled by the
University of Michigan.
Expectations
for inflation meanwhile surged, with respondents indicating they are bracing
for prices to rise by 6.7% over the coming year – the survey’s highest
year-ahead inflation expectation reading since 1981.
“There is
great optimism in this economy,” Leavitt claimed at the White House briefing
when asked about the survey. “Trust in President Trump. He knows what he’s
doing. This is a proven economic formula.”
Trump won
back the White House last November by pledging to rapidly bring down prices –
something he has claimed, in recent weeks, is already happening. US inflation
climbed at an annual rate of 2.4% last month, according to official data.
“Consumers
have spiralled from anxious to petrified,” observed Samuel Tombs, chief US
economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. He added, however, that a bipartisan
divide – with Democrats growing more pessimistic, while Republicans become more
upbeat – suggests that people are allowing their political views to cloud their
economic confidence.
The US’s top
markets watchdog is facing demands from senior Democrats to launch an
investigation into alleged insider trading and market manipulation after Trump
declared on social media that it was “A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!!” hours before
announcing Wednesday’s climbdown on tariffs.
Days of
erratic policymaking constructed a rollercoaster week for markets, with the
S&P 500 dropping 12% in just four sessions, before surging back almost 10%
in a single day after the administration pulled back from imposing higher
tariffs on most countries, except China, which is facing a 145% tariff on
exports to the US.
In a letter
to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Senate Democrats including
Elizabeth Warren and Chuck Schumer wrote: “It is unconscionable that as
American families are concerned about their financial security during this
economic crisis entirely manufactured by the President, insiders may have
actively profited from the market volatility and potentially perpetrated
financial fraud on the American public.”
Tesla
meanwhile stopped taking orders in China for two models it previously imported
from the US, as companies scramble to adapt to prohibitive tariffs imposed in
Trump’s trade war.
The
manufacturer, run by Trump’s close ally Elon Musk, removed “order now” buttons
on its Chinese website for its Model S saloon and Model X sports utility
vehicle.
Tesla did
not give any indication of why it had made the changes but it came after the
rapid escalation of the trade war between the US and China.
The border
taxes make the goods trade between the two countries prohibitively expensive
and mean cars imported from the US are now much less attractive in China than
those produced locally.
In the UK,
economists warned that stronger than expected growth of 0.5% in February is
likely to prove short lived as the impact of Trump’s trade war is felt
throughout the global economy.
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