Market Overview - Trump's "Reciprocal Tariff 2.0" threat has been postponed to August 1, 2025, leading to a slight decline in U.S. stocks[1] - The inflation pressure from tariff threats has cooled market rate cut expectations, resulting in a rise in U.S. Treasury yields[1] - The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield increased by 6.75 basis points to 4.409% during the week from July 7 to July 11[1] Economic Indicators - The June FOMC meeting minutes released hawkish signals, with some dovish Fed officials showing caution towards rate cuts due to tariff impacts[1] - The NFIB small business optimism index for June recorded 98.6, unchanged from expectations and slightly down from the previous value of 98.8[1] - The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model predicts a Q2 2025 U.S. GDP growth of +2.6%[1] Tariff Implications - Trump signed an executive order to extend the tariff deadline to August 1, announcing new tariff rates for 25 countries and regions, including Japan (25%), South Korea (25%), and Brazil (50%)[1] - Market reactions to the tariff threats have been relatively muted, with participants adopting TACO trading strategies, betting on further delays or cancellations of the tariffs[1] - The new tariff rates are seen as a pressure tactic in trade negotiations, with the possibility of further extensions beyond August 1[1]
海外周报20250713:特朗普“对等关税2.0”威胁延期至8月1日-20250713
Soochow Securities·2025-07-13 10:31