Watching the current tariff shenanigans and listening to superficially rational people panic is both startling and a bit sad. I realise that there is going to be a lot of people take injury from the convulsions and I am sympathetic to their distress.
This is human nature at play and there is plenty of learning to be learned.
Firstly, all the media and talking heads who are busy crying (or expressing glee) about the stock market movements... are treating it like its the centre of the world. When on any other day, they want to pretend that its just not that interesting.
Are they just trend following (some) are they disingenuous (many) are they just pointing slackjawed as something exciting happenes that they don't really have any idea about (lots of them too). Mostly they are just fools spectating on something that they think is a trainwreck... and yelling everything they know about trains.
Watching the politicians wriggle on the hook is more interesting. So many of them want to say alot of nothing domestically... while keeping their heads down internationally.
The irony is that very little of this will directly effect anyone... except the doomsayser. They are having a field day.
I have come across a couple of "Analysts" who are trying to "rules-lawyer" their ways out of this and argue about the minutia and "prove" that its wrong and how it should be wound back immediately.
So far, the more predictable things have happened... there has been a panic on the stockmarkets as all the usual chickens run around looking for the next "sure thing". The biggest correction has been about 10% which is just a normal fuckup day for most stocks. This is the sort of thing you see when market news comes out that a CEO has been caught with their hand in the cookies again.... I think its reflective of the retail share holders panic and dumping the stock. Usually this would be the time to pick up a bargain.
But the fundamentals have not really changed except for the US domestic market. People are still going to buy stuff tomorrow shops are going to pass costs on... etc etc. The normal rules of economics will still happen. These corrections are going to ripple for a while as different supply chains figure out what's happening and contracts get renewed... and then they will all get back to business. There will be winners and losers... as there always is. Retail investors will pick new "winners" and try to inflate their value by talking them up... the great cycle continues.
I was amused to see the don come out and try to reassure the US domestic markets this morning. I don't think he was really ready for the amount of crying and hand wringing from all the voices in the US. But he did a good job and said nothing to make it worse.
The truly fascinating part of this is that having a second run at the presidency has given his team a lot of time to learn from their mistakes the first time. They had four years to see the consequences of their actions and all the holes and this time they have done a blanket system. So it will be interesting to see if this actually gets a result without all the holes to wriggle through.
Fundamentally, this is an attempt to force all the US companies that have off-shored their manufacturing to bring it back on-shore. However, four years is not going to be long enough to up-skill and re-build all the capacity that the US once had. So its a start... but will it start a trend? Only time will tell. I think this is probably the last roll of the dice for the US middle class to recapture dominance of manufacturing. The problem will be with all their domestic policies on wages and standard of living etc that force up the cost... the only way out will be robotics. Which ends up at the same place... not enough labour involved in the market.
The other interesting possibility is that all the seeding of capacity that has gone on in other countries blooms into new production of products that are not US owned. That will be the truly wonderful outcome of this change.
Hopefully there will be a bunch of other countries that play the trade barrier game and shatter the "free market" because while its been an interesting experiment... really has completed all the outcomes that the policy could achieve. The winners and losers in that game have been decided and now its just static. There needs to be a new game, with new opportunities... and lots of new players. And this could be it. All the incumbents are going to cry and try to maintain their monopolies, but this is the best chance to shake up the order and create new opportunities.
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