What to Watch in The Face of Tariff Turbulence

Key takeaways:

  • A global trade war is a real threat
  • The reaction from global policymakers, particularly central banks, will shape market sentiment
  • Markets may stay volatile until policy clarity returns, but long-term fundamentals will ultimately reassert themselves

What’s happened?

As investors are uncomfortably aware of, global equity markets have been in freefall since U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of “reciprocal tariffs” on April 2. As of this writing (April 4 at 10 a.m. Pacific), U.S., UK and European shares are down by close to 10% since the announcement. Government bond yields have fallen by 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points as investors rush to safe havens.

Market reaction since the announcement

  • U.S., European and UK stock markets are down by around 9%
  • U.S. 10-year Treasury yields have fallen by 20 basis points to about 4.0%
  • UK 10-year gilt yields have fallen by 25 basis points to 4.4German 10-year bund yields have fallen 20 basis points to 2.5%
  • Euro has rallied by 2% against the USD
  • Sterling is up about 1% against the USD
  • 4 Fed rate cuts are priced by year-end, taking the federal funds rate to 3.25%
  • 3 ECB rate cuts are priced by year-end, taking the deposit facility rate to 1.5-1.75%
  • 3 BOE rate cuts are priced by year-end, taking the base rate to 3.75%

The global nature of the trade war is a real problem. For instance, the EU might only have a small direct exposure to U.S. exports, but overall exports of goods account for nearly 40% of GDP. For the UK, it’s around 15% of GDP. Markets fear that the trade war, potential retaliation and the policy uncertainty from the White House will cause a global recession and magnify the impact of the individual tariff decisions.