NorthHawk wrote:They could avoid tariffs by renaming their companies ZTE, I suppose.
Sarcasm aside, a lot of people don't know that part of the great depression of 1929 started after tariffs and trade embargoes were implemented.
They had a great bull market like we have seen for the past 8 or so years then trade restrictions were enacted and it all fell apart. It probably wasn't
the sole cause, as the market was getting tired as it is today, but lessens can be learned from it.
The other concern is businesses are carrying a lot of debt. There are some businesses that are making money that are having trouble renewing loans
and a recession caused by tariffs could hit harder than it might otherwise would. Personal debt is a real concern as well. With low interest rates, we
have a whole generation who have borrowed cheap money and when the rates rise, they're going to be hit hard.
It's hard to imagine this ending well if tariffs are fully implemented.
Edit:
Nobody wins a trade war. There are only lesser impacts to some.
idhawkman wrote:So far, it is all bluster and positioning. Let it play out.
"More than four jobs would be lost for every one gained, with the gains in metals and machinery coming at the expense of agriculture, transportation equipment and services,” the report predicted.
We can not afford to keep doing this.
idhawkman wrote:Now is the best time to fight this battle since companies are flush with cash to invest in building up our own factories, the economy is growing rapidly currently projected at 4% for the second quarter and interest rates are being raised and we have more jobs than workers. No other time will be as advantageous for us to level the playing field than now.
The EU and China have targeted tarrifs on the states that Trump won to try and leverage political pressure on him. That's great, they've fired their volley back at us but what do they have left in their quiver after that? Trump has imposed new tarrifs on China today to the tune of $100B. [u]What are the Chinese going to do now? Raise their tarrifs even more on our Soy beans and beef?[/I] We can't compete now so who cares if they raise the rates more?
On a side note, don't think I am ambivalent toward this issue. I manufacture products in China and import goods from China and sell them online throughout the U.S. Canada and Mexico. The reason I do this is because our factories in the US can not compete with China. So your hard earned dollars that pay for my goods I send to China and then China buys more businesses in the US with those dollars. We can not afford to keep doing this.
The fight may be on but the first salvo's are not going to effect us much at least no more than the fed's interest rate increases and the debacle of a slow economy over the last 8 years.
idhawkman wrote:For River:
The new forecast is now 4.8% for second quarter. A simple google search finds these top three results:
https://www.frbatlanta.org/cqer/research/gdpnow.aspx
https://www.fxstreet.com/news/atlanta-fed-gdpnow-rises-to-47-from-4-for-q2-201805311512
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-economy-atlantafed/atlanta-fed-upgrades-us-second-quarter-gdp-view-to-47-percent-idUSKCN1IW2EH
So as you can see, the 4% I stated is actually conservative. You'll also note that our exports are up in those articles, too.
The sky is not falling. The market has reacted but has rebounded each time there are fears of a trade war. Much of the drops are from machine trading and not based on fundamentals which is why it rebounds quickly when the stocks go on sale. The Dow closed yesterday within a whisper of 25,000 (near all time highs) and the S&P and NASDAQ keep making new highs. I know it is nerve racking being on a fixed income but it isn't as bad as you think it is.
The best time to take care of a problem is in the beginning - just like cancer. Waiting until it matasticizes only makes the cure more dramatic but doing nothing at all leads to death. This issue has gone on for over 4 decades and must be solved now. The methods are going to be more extreme because no one wanted to spend the political capital needed to fix it. Doing nothing at this point is not an option.
Oh and Cbob didn't catch me in anything. Every charge of such has been rebutted so unless you show me where that is that he rebutted me and I didn't respond accordingly, it doesn't exist.
idhawkman wrote:The Dow closed yesterday within a whisper of 25,000 (near all time highs) and the S&P and NASDAQ keep making new highs.
I'm not going to go so far as to blame the Great Depression on tariffs. The stock market was hugely bloated and Wall Street was almost completely unregulated. Investors were allowed to purchase stock for as little as 10% of their value. Speculators like Joe Kennedy could inflate a stock then sell it when it reached a certain point. When the market started to crash, calls were put out for money that didn't exist. People stormed the banks to withdraw their funds, causing them to fail and many customers lost their life savings as at the time, there were no federal guarantees on deposits. And that's just a condensed version. There were multiple reasons for the depression.
c_hawkbob wrote:It's just a way to separate the consumers (on both sides of the ocean) from more money for the same products. It's got nothing to do with politics.
c_hawkbob wrote:It's just a way to separate the consumers (on both sides of the ocean) from more money for the same products. It's got nothing to do with politics.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The Tariffs will benefit the government, c-bob, to help pay for things. I thought you were ok with higher taxes to pay for things the government gives us?
c_hawkbob wrote:I'm not OK with anything designed to separate the working class from more money for the elite.
If you want more of my money I want assurances it's going to roads and bridges and medicare and schools and not to fund more tax breaks for corporations and billionaires or to the already bloated military budget.
idhawkman wrote:https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2018-06-19/goldman-s-blankfein-talks-trade-credit-markets-and-bitcoin-video
Another couple indicators that the markets are not scared is that Gold has dropped instead of going higher and the Chinese have not dumped their bonds dropping the bond rate.
If you want to hedge against the trade war, buy gold now while it is low at $1200+ per ounce.
...already bloated military budget.
idhawkman wrote:NOTE 1: The tax cuts hadn't taken effect yet in the first quarter so you can't say despite the tax cuts.
RiverDog wrote:Financial markets have tanked several times on news of new tariffs, suggesting investors fear Trump’s protectionism is bad for the economy and for corporate profits. But then markets have recovered, as if correcting from an overreaction. For the year, the S&P 500 index is up about 3%, a relatively weak performance, given the sharp cut in corporate taxes Trump signed into law late last year. That probably means protectionism fears are depressing stocks.
We're not talking about reported earnings, we're talking about the stock market. The corporate tax cut has an immediate impact on stocks as investors are antiipating higher profits.
RiverDog wrote:
For every article you post that claims the markets aren't scared, I can post 5 showing that they are. But we'll see how the market reacts, whether or not they rebound. They obviously don't like the tariffs as every time Trump starts talking about them, the market drops.
One of the disadvantages Trump is going to have is that the Chinese can play politics with their tariffs whereas he can't. They'll pull out their electoral map and figure out what tariffs they can put on that would hurt those red states that Trump can ill afford to lose. China, on the other hand, doesn't have to worry about elections.
idhawkman wrote:NOTE 1: The tax cuts hadn't taken effect yet in the first quarter so you can't say despite the tax cuts.
RiverDog wrote:
From my original post:
Financial markets have tanked several times on news of new tariffs, suggesting investors fear Trump’s protectionism is bad for the economy and for corporate profits. But then markets have recovered, as if correcting from an overreaction. For the year, the S&P 500 index is up about 3%, a relatively weak performance, given the sharp cut in corporate taxes Trump signed into law late last year. That probably means protectionism fears are depressing stocks.
We're not talking about reported earnings, we're talking about the stock market. The corporate tax cut has an immediate impact on stocks as investors are antiipating higher profits.
idhawkman wrote:I was responding to your 1st Qtr GDP numbers post, not your original post, but I think you knew that.
China already did that with their $50B tarrifs. Trump responded with $200B more and raised the stakes. Since our total exports to China is only $130B, they don't have much more room to re-raise let alone match the pot...
idhawkman wrote:China already did that with their $50B tarrifs. Trump responded with $200B more and raised the stakes. Since our total exports to China is only $130B, they don't have much more room to re-raise let alone match the pot...
RiverDog wrote:
You made an assumption that was incorrect. I did not know which statement of mine you were responding to as I made several. It would help if you copied and pasted my direct quote followed by your response.
But to your point, the tax cuts, announced in late 2017, has an immediate affect on business activity. Stocks rise, giving companies more borrowing power, consumer and business confidence rises in anticipation of having more money available, and so on. But my main point was that the stock market has been relatively sluggish when it should be doing gangbusters due to the tax cut, that something is retarding it, and that something is the trade war. I was using those facts as evidence that our economy is going to take a hit if Trump follows through with all the tariffs he's threatening to impose.
NorthHawk wrote:China takes the long term view on economics so they can wait it out.
As well, since the USA is restricting trade with not just China, but the other allies, they see an opportunity to make some of that up with the EU, Mexico, and Canada.
This won't help the American worker because those markets will disappear to some extent because of the tariffs. China might just say sorry, we don't need as many of
your products as we used to as we have found alternative sources and destinations elsewhere. The long game with a ruler for life then punish America for a time after the trade disputes
settle down - if it gets that far.
Had Trump not alienated America's allies, there could have been a united front against China and their Intellectual Property theft among other things. However, with the POTUS dividing
the rest of the world, it makes it much easier for China to continue on its current path.
Here's an article from the US-China Business Council that explains the trading relationship in a somewhat different light.
"As China has become an integral part of the global manufacturing supply chain, much of its exports are comprised of foreign-produced components delivered for final assembly in China. If the value of these imported components is subtracted from China’s exports, the US trade deficit with China is reduced by half, to about 1 percent of GDP—about the same as the US trade deficit with the European Union."
\https://www.uschina.org/reports/understanding-us-china-trade-relationship
They may have a biased perspective, but still it's an interesting point of view.
RiverDog wrote:
There are other things that China can do to retaliate besides tariffs. Due to the controled nature of their media, they can undermine the reputation of many of our US brand name products...Starbucks, McDonald's, and so on. It can also spill over into other areas of foreign policy, including our improving relationship with North Korea:
"China still has plenty of weapons to use once it runs out of quantitative measures," economist Andrew Polk said in a newsletter. Could Beijing end cooperation on North Korea? Punishing UN sanctions on North Korea -- approved and enforced by Beijing -- drove Pyongyang to the negotiating table, analysts say, landing Trump his made-for-TV summit with Kim Jong Un in Singapore earlier this month.
To achieve the North's complete denuclearisation, Trump likely needs Beijing to stay on board with the sanctions, but a trade war could change Chinese thinking, said Cheng Xiaohe, an international relations professor at Renmin University.
Cooperation between China and the United States on the North "will become very complicated and very difficult," Cheng said.
In an indication of China's leverage on the issue, Kim visited Beijing exactly one week after the summit to brief President Xi Jinping, his third trip to China this year.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/afp/ar ... e-war.html
It's the same story with our allies and other countries that we need cooperation on with non economic issues. For example, if Trump wants cooperation with countries like Mexico over border security, he's not going to get it if he has a stranglehold on their necks via tariffs.
The US exports $130B of goods to China and China exports $505B of goods to the US. China will not find $505B of goods to send to other markets.
Addiitonally, these figures don't account for the IP theft. If China puts stuff together, they'll need the IP to make it work.
So for manufacturers, there's a $375B opportunity to fill in the US if it gets that far.
NorthHawk wrote:
The United States is isolating itself within the trading world.
Tarriffs are already announced against the EU, Canada, Mexico, and China being the largest partners, but also India whose market may be larger than China in the future if they get their act together as well as other lesser trading partners and economies.
Who is left to trade with and if those outside of the US coalesce as a single unit against the US, what kind of deal will result? All trading countries need outside and new markets for businesses to expand and keep workers employed. By limiting export markets, it necessarily means less production is required which results in fewer employed. The unintended consequence of Trumps view of America First is America isolated if the current trends continue. A better tack would be to make theslight improvements to the NAFTA to make it better for all, tweak the trade agreements with the EU, then use these agreements and common viewpoints to resist China's theft of IP and market protections. As it is, China is stronger now than they
have ever been since Nixon's visit to China in the 70's because we are divided.
As the saying goes, "If 'ifs and buts were candy and nuts, oh what a Christmas it would be.'"
The reason China is strong is that they've been taking our money and building their defenses along with Clinton giving away our rocket technology, they have become a formidable foe. Before we keep empowering them with more and more cash, we need to balance the trade.
Additionally, if we don't import as much, we need more employees to produce the products we consume, not reduce the number of employees.
idhawkman wrote:Additionally, if we don't import as much, we need more employees to produce the products we consume, not reduce the number of employees.
NorthHawk wrote:The United States is isolating itself within the trading world.
Tarriffs are already announced against the EU, Canada, Mexico, and China being the largest partners, but also India whose market may be larger than China in the future if they get their act together as well as other lesser trading partners and economies.
Who is left to trade with and if those outside of the US coalesce as a single unit against the US, what kind of deal will result? All trading countries need outside and new markets for businesses to expand and keep workers employed. By limiting export markets, it necessarily means less production is required which results in fewer employed. The unintended consequence of Trumps view of America First is America isolated if the current trends continue. A better tack would be to make theslight improvements to the NAFTA to make it better for all, tweak the trade agreements with the EU, then use these agreements and common viewpoints to resist China's theft of IP and market protections. As it is, China is stronger now than they have ever been since Nixon's visit to China in the 70's because we are divided.
RiverDog wrote:And pay higher prices. Imports from China has helped keep prices down so consumers have more money left over to spend on other items. Besides, unemployment is near record lows, so we don't need those jobs that the Chinese currently perform, most of which are unskilled and low paying.
There are some things, like tennis shoes and sweat shirts, that are going to make sense to produce elsewhere. I could care less if we have a trade deficit so long as our unemployment is low, inflation is low, and the economy is growing at a healthy rate, all of which currently exists. Besides, making China dependent on us has its advantages as it makes it less likely for a war to break out.
NorthHawk wrote:Are you saying you can generate wealth by trading only within your own country?
If so, you are sadly mistaken. It's a recipe for economic disaster.
The real reason China is so strong is the pent up desire for private business and the massive population. They have an incredible entrepreneurial spirit and the giant vacuum allowed their economy to develop real quickly.
China, however, has not been a good actor in everything business related with stealing IP, but trade wars may not be the best tool to fix the problems and having the major economies on board in a united front could effect real change.
That's a Chinese Gov't focus that should be addressed at that level.
Here's an article about who would "win" a trade war (lose less is the better descriptors).
https://www.msci.com/www/blog-posts/win ... 0915122305
There are also some further reading links at the bottom should it interest you.
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