Welcome to this week’s economic roundup, where escalating U.S. tariffs under President Donald Trump are reshaping global trade dynamics, prompting responses from central banks, governments, and markets worldwide. From China’s pivot to Canada for oil to the Federal Reserve’s cautious stance, here’s what you need to know.
China Responds: Trade Retaliation, Rate Cuts & Global Realignment
As U.S. tariffs continue to send shockwaves through global trade channels, The People’s Bank of China is expected to cut interest rates in the coming weeks. The move would support the Chinese economy amid intensifying trade friction with the United States.
Beijing is also retaliating in more targeted ways. According to Bloomberg, Chinese authorities have ordered domestic airlines to halt all new deliveries of Boeing jets, extending the freeze to parts and aircraft-related equipment from U.S. suppliers. In a clear shift, China is turning to Airbus, reportedly requesting that any new jets come with an extra set of engines—signaling a deepening rift with U.S. aerospace firms.
On the energy front, China is pivoting towards Canadian oil, moving away from U.S. crude as it diversifies its import sources in the face of economic aggression. With Canada’s vast reserves and rising political momentum behind west coast pipeline projects, the transition may be more than symbolic.
China’s Ministry of Commerce called the recent U.S. tariff exemptions on select high-tech goods such as smartphones and computers “a limited but positive gesture,” but criticized Washington's broader approach as “erroneous” and damaging to global trade rules.
Tariffs Threaten German Outlook
Germany’s economy ministry echoed similar worries, warning that the risk of a significant global slowdown has increased considerably. While current indicators don’t fully reflect the tariff impact yet, uncertainty about export development is exceptionally high.
The European Central Bank cut rates by 25 bps, citing easing inflation and geopolitical risks. ECB President Christine Lagarde emphasized that most indicators point to inflation returning to target but cautioned that a strong euro and trade disruptions pose ongoing risks.
Corporate Outlook: Wall Street Slashes Earnings Forecasts
- Morgan Stanley and Citigroup both slashed their 2025 earnings estimates, warning that Trump’s tariffs are curbing profit growth.
- Nomura downgraded China’s 2025 GDP growth forecast from 4.5% to 4.0%.
- Morgan Stanley also reduced year-end targets for major Asian indexes, citing downgraded global growth and currency risk.
A CNBC Supply Chain survey found that U.S. tariffs are unlikely to bring manufacturing back home, with companies citing high reshoring costs as a barrier.
Trump-Powell Tensions Flare
Trump took to Truth Social, blasting Powell as “always TOO LATE AND WRONG” for not cutting rates and hinting at his termination. The outburst followed Powell’s Chicago speech, where he cautioned that tariffs could fuel inflation. Legal barriers protect Powell’s position, but the feud underscores risks to Fed independence, rattling markets.
Risk-Off Returns
After an initial rally sparked by Trump’s tariff pause announcement, equity markets reversed course:
- S&P 500 is down nearly 3%, and Nasdaq has fallen 4% this week.
- Gold surged to a record $3,355, driven by central bank demand, ETF inflows, and geopolitical tensions.
- USD/JPY broke 2025 lows, as risk-off sentiment swept through global markets.
Markets now await actual trade deal announcements for further direction. Until then, volatility appears here to stay.
Final Thoughts
With inflation still above target, economic uncertainty rising, and geopolitical tensions flaring, the global financial system is entering a period of renewed fragility. As central banks pivot cautiously and world leaders double down on economic nationalism, investors would be wise to watch both policy shifts and political tweets with equal scrutiny.
