▲ | FollowingTheDao 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
It is not that the markets are tricky. Predicting what the Fed will do with interest rates is tricky. By lowering rates they feed more money into the market. Take a look at the last 15 years and you will realize the only thing that gave us a minor recession was COVID, adn that was becasue intrest rates were zero. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FEDFUNDS But they can't do this for much longer, inflation is the first sign, which is why Trump is raising tariffs. You can see Bond prices going up. Trumps tarrifs are aimed and lowering T Bill rates: | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | throw0101a 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> But they can't do this for much longer, inflation is the first sign, which is why Trump is raising tariffs. Trump is raising tariffs because he thinks they are a good idea and has since the 1980s: > “The fact is, you don’t have free trade. We think of it as free trade, but you right now don’t have free trade,” Trump said in a 1987 episode of Larry King Live that’s excerpted in Trump’s Trade War. “A lot of people are tired of watching the other countries ripping off the United States. This is a great country.” * https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/trumps-tariff-str... Trump's mindset is a 1980s NYC real estate guy (zero-sum, one-off games), which when applied to global trade, is basically mercantilist: * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercantilism Meanwhile, in the real world, commerce is often non-zero-sum (both parties get something of value, i.e., "win-win"), and you play multiple rounds with each trading partner and reputation matters (rather than one-off, where burning your bridges could be an actual strategy). | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | AnimalMuppet 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> which is why Trump is raising tariffs. I question this bit. (That may be why he's raising tariffs; I question whether it will work.) When tariffs go up, prices go up (delusions that "other countries will pay" notwithstanding). That shows up in inflation statistics, which in turn will (probably) show up in T Bill rates, but as a higher rate, not a lower one. Except... tariffs might be a one-off increase. They may not compound the way "regular" inflation does. So maybe it will work in the medium term? | |||||||||||||||||
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