Market Update: Trump Tariffs and the New Investment Reality
Jul 09, 2025 5:20 am
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The Easy Money Days Are Over
Think of the last 15 years like a calm ocean where almost everyone made money just by buying popular US stocks and some safe government bonds. Those calm waters are gone.
Trump's Tariff Theater
Markets are essentially shrugging at Trump's tariff threats. Here's what happened this week:
- Deadline Drama: Trump moved his tariff deadline from this week to August 1st (though Treasury says maybe September 1st). His deadlines should be taken "seriously but not literally."
- Latest Threats: Japan and South Korea face 25% tariffs starting August 1st. These countries make up 9% of US imports and 7% of US exports.
- Market Reaction: Almost none. S&P 500 fell just 0.2%. Asian markets actually rose - Korean stocks up 1.4%, Japanese stocks up 0.4%.
- The Reality: Most goods are already taxed or exempt. The effective tariff rate would only rise from 15.5% to 16.6%.
Why This Dismissive Attitude Could Backfire
Markets think moderate tariffs won't hurt much. But Trump might get bolder and impose bigger tariffs if he sees markets don't care. This adds more uncertainty to an already uncertain time.
The Bigger Picture: Three Major Changes Reshaping Investing
1. The AI Revolution
- America still leads in technology, especially AI
- Just like past inventions (internet, smartphones), AI should make companies more productive and profitable.
- But, it's going to be a bumpy ride with lots of false hopes, company failures, and market crashes along the way.
- Think early internet days: lots of potential but also lots of companies that seemed great but disappeared.
2. Countries Are Trading Less With Each Other
- Before, all world markets moved together because countries traded freely.
- Now with trade wars and countries preferring to trade with "friends," markets are becoming more separate.
- It's like neighbors who used to share everything now keeping to themselves.
- This means you can't just buy US stocks anymore; you will need to diversify across the world.
3. Everything Costs More Now (Inflation)
- Interest rates are higher and will stay bumpy.
- The old trick of "when stocks go down, bonds go up" doesn't work reliably anymore.
- You need to be smarter about which types of bonds to buy and for how long.
What This Means for Your Money
- Good news: You can potentially make more money than before.
- Bad news: It's going to be much more volatile (think roller coaster, not escalator).
- Reality check: You can't just "set it and forget it" anymore.
What You Need to Do
- Spread your money globally - don't just invest in US stocks.
- Be smarter about bonds - not all bonds are the same anymore.
- Focus on protecting your money first, making profits second.
- Pay attention - investing now requires more care and skill.
Bottom Line
The investment world is becoming more like it was before the 2010s, more opportunities to make money, but also more ways to lose it.
We will need to be more thoughtful about your investments.
Trump's tariff negotiations are still in early stages, but the bigger structural changes in markets are already here.
While markets remain calm about moderate tariffs, this indifference could backfire if Trump escalates.
Happy Hump Day!
PS: Ultrashort bond funds can help investors secure higher income amid the current market uncertainty, so long as the U.S. keeps rates high for a longer period... ping me if you wish to take advantage.
Best Regards,
Zest Chia
Executive Wealth Consultant | Associate Estate Planning Practitioner |
Licensed General Insurance Advisory
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