7 more tariff charts
Greenland must be ours; embargo on UST; China's actual leverage; imports slow
Travel day today, and then off the for the holiday for a week. Hopefully, by the time I come back, we’ll have moved on to something else.
we must have Greenland
dumping our top export: UST
China’s actual leverage (it’s da batteries and da workarounds) . . . but, no, it’s very unlikely that ‘Trump will drive the world closer to China’
finally, some actual evidence of a tariff-related slowdown
👉👉👉Reminder to sign up for the Weekly Recap only, if daily emails is too much. Find me on twitter, for more fun.
Publishing note: posting will be a bit more sporadic over the coming weeks. I’ve got some planning to do, plus some other commitments, but then I’ll be away for Passover. So, there will be posts, but not every day.
7 more tariff charts
In case you missed it, Trump put the screws to China, while giving the rest of the world another 90 days to negotiate.
Negotiate what? Unclear, but Random Walk thinks it’s some combination of buying more stuff from the US (or investing in the US); buying less stuff from China; and/or lending the Federal Gov’t at below-market rates.
Anyways, two Random Walkian ideas are playing out (for now). (1) These are China tariffs, in the main; and (2) the world’s primary leverage is its willingness to buy our biggest export: Treasuries.
Also, we totally do need to conquer Greenland:
China has turned Greenland into a colony, right on our doorstep!
Actually, I know nothing about Greenland, but it’s now a net-importer from China too, and well, I still no nothing about Greenland. But I have questions.
Trade embargo on UST
Yields spiked yesterday as someone (perhaps Japan) was dumping a lot of Treasuries:
Bloomberg
It could have also been an unwind of the carry trade, but who knows.
China’s leverage
China can’t ‘cozy up’ to all the countries we’ve ‘slighted,’ because it needs to sell, so it can’t be a replacement buyer.
So no, tariffs aren’t ‘pushing anyone into China’s orbit.’
What China can do is take all the rare metals and batteries:
China’s got all the metals and all the patents to make the batteries that we need for the electrification of everything.
The other thing that China can do (other than cutting deep sea cables, and all that), is it can route its goods through places like Vietnam and Mexico:
China sends more goods to Vietnam and Mexico (and less to the US), while Vietnam and Mexico send a corresponding increase to the US.
It’s highly unlikely that that is a coincidence.
Imports do appear to have slowed
And finally, because Random Walk was careful to note that, despite all the false headlines about the Great Tariff Uncertainty Crisis, there was little to no actual evidence of any slowdown . . . there is finally some evidence of a slowdown.
Estimated imports most definitely dropped off when the big news hit:
Ports have not yet reported March’s numbers, but Global Port Tracker projected the month at 2.14 million TEU, up 11.1% year over year. April – which includes cargo shipped before the new tariffs were announced – is forecast at 2.08 million TEU, up 3.1% year over year. '
But May is expected to end 19 consecutive months of year-over-year growth, dropping sharply to 1.66 million TEU, down 20.5% from the same time last year. June is forecast at 1.57 million TEU, the lowest volume since February 2023 and a 26.6% drop year over year. July is forecast at 1.69 million TEU, down 27% year over year, and August at 1.7 million TEU, down 26.8%.
To be fair, I don’t really know how they make these estimates, but 20% yoy decline ain’t nothing.
Previously, on Random Walk
Volatility begets volatility, and other sundries
Vol begets vol (and the analysts get it wrong, a lot)
Healthcare makes all the jobs . . . but maybe manufacturing too? Other labor market desiderata
healthcare jobs replaced all the manufacturing jobs (much to the benefit of women and aides)
Random Walk is an idea company dedicated to the discovery of idea alpha. Find differentiated data, perspectives and people, and keep your information mix lively. A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds. Fight the Great Idea Stagnation. Join Random Walk. Follow me on twitter. Follow me on substack:
Buying trillions of an asset and then trashing it with a fire sale isn’t a particularly good trading strategy, but I don’t really think these East Asians are the long term planners they are made out to be.
On the flip side the fact that USG only have a five or six year average maturity is such a massive own goal. You think that maybe before we blow out our national credit we make sure we’ve got a locked in long term fixed rate rather than a teaser intro rate that will reset.
this is my new go-to blog for economics