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From tariff tantrums to horse-trade diplomacy – Tokyo’s the test balloon, Beijing’s the endgame

We’ve officially left the tariff doom loop and entered the horse-trading zone — and right now, all eyes are on Tokyo and Beijing. The game has shifted from fire-breathing headline risk to carrot-and-stick diplomacy, and traders are treating Japan like the test balloon for how far Washington’s “deal if you’re friendly, pain if you’re not” trade doctrine can really go.

You can feel it in the tape — Nikkei ripping over 1%, Toyota and Honda charging like it’s 2014 again, and futures bouncing as the algos clock the phrase “auto tariff reprieve.” That word — reprieve — is quickly becoming this cycle’s safe word. And let’s not kid ourselves: this isn’t about economic metrics anymore. It’s about who’s willing to play ball with Trump’s America in the grand economic reset.

Bessent laid it out last week — clear as day: strike deals with allies first, get the gang together, then box China in. Simple. Brutal. Strategic. And Ishiba calling the tariffs a “national crisis” is the tell that Japan’s ready to deal. If they get tariff relief, the read-through is massive: everyone from Korea to ASEAN will scramble to align before the music stops.

Meanwhile, China’s backed into a tight corner. The U.S. still soaks up nearly a third of their exports, and Europe’s too fractured to catch the spillover. So unless Beijing pulls a magic rabbit out of their reserve basket, the “factory to the world” model is staring down a brutal re-rate.

Back in the U.S., the three-pronged playbook will soon be in full swing — tariffs, tax, and deregulation — all designed to force a manufacturing renaissance and break the Wall Street/cheap-labor offshore loop. The market’s slowly realizing this isn’t just noise. This is policy with teeth.

And let’s not forget: the market isn’t reacting to peace — it’s reacting to strategy. We're not in “risk-on” nirvana — we’re in reprieve mode. It’s temporary, it’s tactical, and it’s tradable. If Japan gets the golden handshake, expect a rush of copycats. If they get stonewalled, the next stop is risk-off roulette.

For now? The tape’s stabilizing, the reprieve narrative is holding, and the game is on. But don’t blink — the next tariff shoe could drop before your coffee does.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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