Market wrap
Relief was short-lived. The so-called rally, and unanchored one at that, tried to ride Trump’s tariff turnabout rolled over Thursday, as traders stepped back to reassess what, if anything, had actually changed. Asian equities broke stride, futures slipped into the red, and the dollar lost its grip after a midweek bounce. Chalk it up to whiplash fatigue: when the only constant is Trump’s inconsistency, price action starts looking like white noise again..
This latest episode of the Trump Trade Show featured a trial balloon on cutting China tariffs—floated, walked back, and then smothered in qualifiers by Bessent and the usual comms crew—no unilateral move. No clarity. No edge. It’s a flip-flop market in flip-flop season.
Forex markets
I’m not built for scalping, but I’ll admit—when the tape starts popping and we’re trading headlines like slot machines, I don’t mind nibbling in the 8-hour window if the setup’s clean. In this market, you get in, get paid, or get gone. Don’t overstay—there’s no medal for holding garbage.
Right now, the dollar’s spinning like it’s strapped to a roulette wheel—every move riding on the next trade war headline. You toss the beta, pray it lands on “deal,” and chase the bounce. But to stay in the game, the buck needs a double shot of clean, high-octane trade optimism—every day. Momentum doesn’t run on fumes. It runs on follow-through.
This week, Trump and Bessent did just that—two straight days of de-escalation talk, a toned-down Fed tirade, and a “strong dollar” sermon on the South Lawn. Great. USD bounced hard. But unless that headline drip stays trade deal sugar-sweet, the market will fade rallies faster than you can say “tariff truce.”
Remember: the greenback is still the highest-beta G10 play when it comes to tariff relief. But sentiment is fragile. One wobble in the rhetoric and dollar bulls turn tail. We’ve been here before—Trump’s 90-day pause on tariffs rang the bell, and the next thing you knew, China got hit harder. Nobody’s forgetting that.
Bessent tried to calm the horses, reiterating strong-dollar policy at the IIF event. Sure, maybe that’s an attempt to patch up some reserve flight leaks. But we’re not buying in bulk yet—not without sustained delivery. Traders are sniffing out any shift back to aggression and hitting the sell button.
Look at USD/JPY—moonshot over 143.50 overnight, the rolled over quickly. That’s not conviction. That’s a scalp and dash. PMIs came in fine, but the FX market barely blinked. All eyes now on durables and jobless claims. A miss there and you’ll see recession ghosts reappear—fast.
As for EUR/USD? Still overvalued by any market metrics.. Don’t get caught cheering euro strength just because its still in vogue . If Trump feeds the market more risk-on candy, 1.130 breaks, and we’re staring at a deeper washout. Euro is still the G10’s most crowded long next to the yen. There’s room to squeeze.
Ride the flip-flops, fade the fantasy, and stay liquid. The dollar isn’t dead—but it’s on a short leash.
The view
Trump wants tariffs “substantially lower,” but not off the table — classic hedged messaging with just enough ambiguity to move markets without committing to anything real. Then Bessent pops up to remind everyone this won’t be a one-way street — no unilateral tariff cuts, just "let’s talk about it" diplomacy dressed up as strategy. Translation: yes, they want a deal. No, they’re not close. And yes, this is still a headline-driven circus.
We already knew tariffs at 145% were unsustainable — that was priced in. What’s new is the rhetorical softening, which the White House is trying to spin as progress. But until there’s actual detail, all we’ve got is tone shift, not policy shift.
And that’s the problem. Markets don’t price tone — they price action. Uncertainty is the real tariff here. It paralyzes investment, jams up supply chain decisions, and keeps both traders and CEOs on the sidelines. The longer this “maybe, maybe not” theatre drags on, the more it weighs on global activity and risk appetite.
You don’t need a PhD in macro to see what’s going on — the administration is trying to engineer a reset without looking like they’re folding. But without precision, it’s just more shadowboxing. In this game, ambiguity costs money.
Let’s be honest—the future isn’t going to be defined by how many dollar-store trinkets China can ship out of Shenzhen. The real battleground is tech and security. We’re entering an era where semiconductors, AI models, quantum capabilities, and secure data infrastructure will matter more than trade flows in sneakers and plasticware. The U.S.-China rivalry is no longer about trade balances and tariff spreadsheets—it’s about who controls the architecture of global power.
Tech isn't just a sector anymore. It's a strategic asset. And security isn't just about defense budgets—it's about cyber networks, encryption standards, and supply chain sovereignty. This shift isn’t subtle. It’s structural. Policymakers know it. Markets are waking up to it. And the days of judging economic relevance by container exports are numbered.
In this world, value is upstream—built into code, not cables. Nations won’t win by exporting more widgets. They’ll win by embedding their technology in global systems and controlling the standards everyone else has to follow. That’s why this new phase of U.S.-China competition isn’t a trade war. It’s a full-spectrum contest for digital dominance.
作者:Stephen Innes,文章来源FXStreet,版权归原作者所有,如有侵权请联系本人删除。
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