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US Vs China - Is It 'Art Of The Deal' Or Economic Warfare?

• https://www.zerohedge.com

While monetary tightening remains the main risk for global stock markets, the threat of a trade war continues to dominate the headlines...

THE DONALD'S DEALMAKING

The question raised by Donald Trump's trade agenda with China remains, in essence, extremely simple. It is whether The Donald is engaged in a typical 'Art of the Deal' negotiation, where he can suddenly turn on a dime and declare a 'win', or whether he is really seriously trying to stop Chinaupgrading its economy by targeting 'Made in China 2025'.

Such a stance would amount to an act of economic warfare. On this point, it should be understood that some of those in Washington pushing this policy view of China as some kind of strategic rival for global leadership. For such people this is about far more than just tariffs.

The markets had been assuming that the American president would not take this too far. But, as discussed here before, concerns have grown as it has increasingly looked like Trump is supporting Robert Lighthizer's (US Trade Representative) and Peter Navarro's (White House Economic Adviser) agenda.

HOW LIKELY IS ECONOMIC WARFARE?

On July 6, first the US and then Chinese 25% tariffs on US$34 billion worth of goods are due to go into effect. If bilateral negotiations do not resume before that date, then the chances of the US and China entering a so-called trade war grow significantly.

If the above is the state of play, market action has now become critical. The more that the US stock market freaks out about these policies in terms of declining share prices, the more likely becomes The Donald to perform a U-turn. This is because Trump is a market-focused guy even if it is also the case that much of his electoral base are not invested in stocks because they do not have the requisite savings.

There has already been more than a hint of this market dynamic at work last week when the S&P500 recovered some of its losses 'intraday' on Monday after Navarro was presumably ordered to issue a less combative statement. His comments came after news reports over the weekend that the US could block companies with at least 25% Chinese ownership from buying companies involved in so-called "industrially significant technology".


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