Monday, December 16, 2024

Analysis-Stocks cheered Trump’s victory, but tariffs bring unknowns to 2025

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By Lewis Krauskopf

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. stock market welcomed Donald Trump’s victory in the 2024 presidential election, but turbulence may lie ahead if the president-elect makes good on his tariff threats.

Much about the incoming administration’s policies remains uncertain, including whether Trump’s renewed threats last month to impose tariffs on China, Canada, Mexico and other U.S. trading partners are opening salvos to negotiating other issues, such as border security.

The timing and extent of new tariffs are also unclear, and the severity of the tariffs’ impact on the U.S. could depend on whether targeted countries respond with measures of their own.

Economists’ worst-case forecasts, however, paint a worrisome picture.

One extreme long-term scenario run by Oxford Economics showed world trade shrinking as much as 10% and U.S. economic growth about 1% below current expectations. Tariffs will hit corporate earnings, particularly in the retail, industrials and materials sectors, while stoking inflation, other forecasts show.

“Tariffs are basically bad for the economy,” said David Kelly, chief global strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management. “You can actually have a stagflationary effect of both increasing inflation pressures and reducing economic growth at the same time.”

Trump’s renewed threats caused waves in foreign currency markets, but U.S. stocks largely shrugged them off as the market extended this year’s more than 26% rally, which has taken the S&P 500 to record highs.

Barclays strategists estimated that proposed tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China – and any retaliatory actions – could drag S&P 500 earnings down 2.8%.

The materials and consumer discretionary sectors could face double-digit earnings declines, due to their significant supply and production presence in Mexico and Canada, Barclays said.

Retaliatory tariffs by targeted countries would exacerbate any earnings fallout.

BofA Global Research expects a 1% hit to S&P 500 earnings if tariffs on China double to 40% while they rise to around 8% for the rest of the world, excluding Mexico and Canada. But with retaliatory tariffs, which hurt foreign sales, the earnings hit would rise to 5%, the bank’s strategists wrote.

Tariffs may also increase the core measure of the personal consumption expenditures price index, a widely used inflation gauge, to around 2.5% from 2.3% next year, according to Deutsche Bank economists.

The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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