|

Trump fires first salvo in multifront trade war

  • Trump fired the first shot in a multifront trade war on Saturday when tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China became a reality.

  • The tariffs are linked to border security and thus could be removed or reduced following negotiations. However, there is also a risk we see a tit-for-tat escalation in the short term. We also expect to see more tariffs on China later this year and that EU and possibly other countries will be hit as well before long.

  • US growth may take a moderate short-term hit but fiscal easing keeps the medium term outlook broadly unchanged for now. Inflation will see a modest one-off impulse.

  • The biggest impact for now may be the uncertainty the global economy is faced with, and supply chain planning for businesses have only become more tricky.

What happened?

Donald Trump announced 25% tariffs covering all goods imports from Mexico and Canada, although energy imports from the latter will face only a 10% rate. In addition, Chinese tariff rates will be increased by 10%-points. The tariff changes will take effect from Tuesday 4th of February. While Trump had warned of the tariffs already in December, markets were not convinced and Polymarket only had a 25% probability of tariffs on Mexico and Canada before March. Hence, we saw a quite big market reaction with USD strengthening and US equity futures losing 3% from the peak on Friday.

Canada has already announced 25% counter-tariffs on CAD155bn of imports from the US, which cover roughly 1/3 of the trade. Tariffs on goods worth CAD30bn will take effect on the same day as the US measures, while the rest will be enacted 21 days later. At the time of writing, Mexico has not yet announced counter-measures of its own, but planning is reportedly under way. China has stated it will take “necessary counter-measures” but without specifying details.

Impact on US economy to be moderate for now

On conventional basis, the new tariffs are expected to increase US public revenues by USD110-120bn per year according to Tax Foundation. This is equal to fiscal tightening of 0.3-0.4% of GDP, and excluding any impact from counter-measures, Tax Foundation estimates the negative impact on real GDP at 0.4%. Canada’s counter-tariffs will add a further modest headwind to growth but note that while US accounts for nearly 75% of Canadian exports, Canada accounts for only around 16% of US exports.

The fiscal tightening effect will most likely be counteracted by Republicans’ planned easing to domestic taxation, even if we still know very little about its exact details. The Penn-Wharton Budget Model estimated earlier that Trump’s campaign proposals could end up widening public deficits by more than USD600bn per year from 2027 onwards, with majority of the increased spending coming from extensions to income tax cuts from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. We discussed the complicated interplay of funding domestic tax easing with import tariffs earlier in Reading the Markets USD - How much of an impact will a fiscal hawk have? 26 November.

Download The Full Research Global

Author

Danske Research Team

Danske Research Team

Danske Bank A/S

Research is part of Danske Bank Markets and operate as Danske Bank's research department. The department monitors financial markets and economic trends of relevance to Danske Bank Markets and its clients.

More from Danske Research Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD consolidates around 1.0900, bullish bias remains ahead of key US data

The EUR/USD pair is seen consolidating its strong gains registered over the past two days and oscillating in a narrow band during the Asian session on Tuesday. Spot prices currently trade around the 1.1900 mark, just below an over one-week high touched the previous day.

GBP/USD tilts bullish as markets barrel toward mid-week NFP print

GBP/USD is holding a broader bullish structure on the daily chart, with price trading well above the 50 Exponential Moving Average at 1.3507 and the 200 EMA at 1.3310, confirming the intermediate uptrend that has been in place since the November 2025 low near 1.2300. 

Gold: Will US Retail Sales data propel it above $5,100?

Gold hovers below weekly highs of $5,087 early Tuesday, await US Retail Sales data. The US Dollar enters a downside consolidation phase amid persistent Japanese Yen strength and worsening labor market. Gold settled Monday above $5,000, now looks to take out $5,100 amid bullish daily RSI.

Top Crypto Gainers: World Liberty Financial, MemeCore and Quant gain momentum

World Liberty Financial, MemeCore, and Quant are leading gains over the last 24 hours as the broader cryptocurrency market stabilizes after last week’s correction. Still, the technical outlook for altcoins remains mixed due to prevailing downside pressure and vulnerable market sentiment. 

Follow the money, what USD/JPY in Tokyo is really telling you

Over the past two Tokyo sessions, this has not been a rate story. Not even close. Interest rate differentials have been spectators, not drivers. What has moved USD/JPY in local hours has been flow and flow alone.

Ripple exposed to volatility amid low retail interest, modest fund inflows

Ripple (XRP) is extending its intraday decline to around $1.40 at the time of writing on Monday amid growing pressure from the retail market and risk-off sentiment that continues to keep investors on the sidelines.