The Great Wall

President Trump has been a vocal admirer of China’s Great Wall, built by the country’s emperors to protect their territory from outside aggression. In his first term, he compared his plan to build a border wall with that historic structure. Now in his second term, the President is attempting to erect even a bigger wall of tariffs to halt goods flowing in from all over the world.

Under pressure from a recent sell-off in financial markets, the president has decided to keep his tariff wall somewhat lower for now. But U.S.-China trade tensions that are swiftly escalating to a point of breakdown will have consequences for every participant along supply chains between the two nations.

Reciprocal tariffs may never come to full fruition, but the 10% universal levy and sectoral duties are here to stay. These will be enough to impair growth, pushing major markets closer to economic stagnation. The degree of stress will depend on reactions and retaliations.

The reciprocal tariff delay has raised hopes of the U.S. administration’s willingness to strike deals. But if the ultimate objective is to reindustrialize the American economy, then a lengthy and costly global trade war will end in losses for all participants.

Following are our thoughts on how top markets are faring.

United States

  • The foundation of the soft landing has been the resilient labor market. But the uncertainty created by the trade war may lead firms to trim headcount. Rising unemployment will be the greatest risk to growth. Inflation is likely to rise this year as tariff costs flow to final prices, with conditions settling somewhat during the balance of 2026. We see the U.S. economy growing at its slowest pace in several years. A downturn is not our base case but is very much possible.
  • The Federal Reserve’s job is complicated. They have focused on their mandate to contain inflation and will be hesitant to risk a resurgence by cutting too soon. Softening labor market conditions may compel them to resume easing in September, and gradually thereafter.