Mike
Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings
Appeals
Court Rules (7vs4)
Against
Trump, but Life Goes On
Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018
All of us were unprepared
The “Founding Fathers” designed our government to protect
the minority against the majority, with the courts ruling on critical
decisions. Now that the future of tariffs rests with the courts, I suspect The
President will push for a quick decision.
I would hope at the end of judgement day we will have
answers to two of the motivating drivers behind The President using tariffs to
force discussions with both Congress and foreign countries.
- The first is “Non-Tariff Trade Barriers”, which may be larger than the size of the reciprocal tariffs, which are policies the importing nation forces on the exporting nation. The prohibition of certain fertilizers on imported food elements, or various power constraints on mechanical equipment or transportation vehicles are examples. There are a multitude of restrictions like these imposed by national or local governments on people’s taste buds. In total, these restrictions may very well be enormous in aggregate.
- The second issue is the use of the money generated by the tariffs. (It is well worth remembering that for more than a hundred years, tariffs were the main source of funding for the US government.) Economically, tariffs are a tax on the society. However, it is not clear whether the funds raised will fall under the control of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) or some other instrument of government. The funds raised may potentially be used to reduce the existing deficit, pay for the newly issued tax breaks, or paid out directly to consumers.
The answers to these questions are needed to solve the riddle of weather these tariffs add to or reduce inflation. The independence of the Federal Reserve Bank is therefore a critical factor in dealing with the tariff issues. Many feel the Fed controls short-term interest rates and influences intermediate-term rates. However, it is not that simple. In an article by George Calhoun in Forbes, he lists recent experiences where the Fed lowered rates while the markets raised them. One of the reasons rates rose is the dollar declined or was expected to fall. George Calhoun is a professor and fellow board member at the Stevens Institute of Technology.
The commodity markets are keenly conscious of inflation
expectations. This week commodity futures rose, led by natural gas +2.64%, gold
+1.21%, and copper +1.01%. Another way to play the same trend is in the stocks
of the commodity producers, which are owned by specialty funds. Specialty precious
metals funds rose +2.70%, China funds +1.31%, Agricultural funds +1.30%, and Base
Metals funds +1.12%. While the Courts will decide on the appropriate questions,
the markets will collectively reward those who guess right regarding the direction
of prices.
Please provide any thoughts that might give me a clue on how
to avoid losing money and perhaps make some.
Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.
Mike
Lipper's Blog: What We Should Have Been Watching? - Weekly Blog # 903
Mike
Lipper's Blog: The Week That Wasn't - Weekly Blog # 902
Mike
Lipper's Blog: DIFFERENT IMPLICATIONS: DATA VS. TEXT - Weekly Blog # 901
Did someone forward you this blog?
To receive Mike Lipper’s Blog each Monday morning, please
subscribe by emailing me directly at AML@Lipperadvising.com
Copyright © 2008 – 2024
A. Michael Lipper, CFA
All rights reserved.
Contact author for limited redistribution permission.
No comments:
Post a Comment