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Welcome to the era of the priced-in paradox

Markets are dancing in a hall of mirrors, and the reflections are getting stranger by the day. On Tuesday, President Trump uncorked a fresh round of tariff threats—50% on copper, 200% on pharmaceuticals—and declared the end of extensions after August 1. In response, equities barely blinked. The S&P 500 shuffled sideways, closing virtually unchanged in what should have been a volatility minefield. Welcome to the era of the priced-in paradox.

What should have sounded like policy thunder barely registered a murmur. In any other tape, this kind of trade brinksmanship would’ve scorched risk assets. But in this one? The market hit snooze. Why? Because the tape has seen this movie before—and more often than not, the monster under the bed turns out to be a hand puppet.

Still, not all corners of the market were so complacent. Copper, the industrial lifeblood of modern economies, exploded higher—posting its biggest single-day gain since the dark days of 2008. If you wanted a live fire drill for the “Trump shock,” that was it. The price action screamed supply chain panic, even if the broader indices hummed a lullaby.

Pharma stocks wobbled too, but the real drama was contained. Perhaps because traders have learned the new rules: When Trump talks tough, the first move is not to sell but to ask, “how serious is this week’s headline?”

We’re now in a world of tariff kabuki—visually intense, narratively muddled, and entirely performative until proven otherwise. Call it WrestleNomics. Like pro wrestling (which Trump famously adores), the drama is deliberate, the outcomes are often pre-scripted, and the crowd keeps coming back despite knowing it’s not quite real. But even in the ring, bones break from time to time.

Beneath the bombast, there’s a creeping normalization of trade policy-by-tweet. What was once unthinkable—a potential average import tariff rate of nearly 20%—now gets chewed over like just another data point. Analysts note this would eclipse the Smoot-Hawley era and bring us back to a McKinley-style fortress economy. And yet here we are, with the VIX asleep and strategists raising year-end S&P targets.

That calm hides a growing asymmetry. Traders can pivot on a dime, but corporate managers are trapped in a fog of policy improvisation. The WTO may still exist, but it's functionally ghosted in Washington. Trade no longer flows through frameworks; it flows through vibes.

The letters sent out this week—blunt instruments masquerading as negotiations—fueled more uncertainty. But investors are conditioned to expect walk-backs. “Trump Always Chickens Out,” or TACO, remains the dominant narrative. Only now, the Trump Put has morphed. It’s no longer pegged to the S&P or bond yields—it’s inflation. Until CPI breaks out, there’s room for more rhetorical fireworks.

And therein lies the market’s dilemma: the policy pain threshold has shifted. So long as inflation is stable and the consumer remains docile, the White House has political headroom. And that might mean the old “TACO” may become stale. This is not just about walk-backs anymore—it’s about where the pain finally lands. Copper traders felt it Tuesday. Pharma CEOs just opened their inboxes to a fresh migraine. But the index crowd? Still sipping their July margaritas.

This is no longer classic negotiation—it’s a series of rolling ceasefires in a trade war that behaves more like a Netflix drama: episodic, bingeable, and always one tweet away from a plot twist.

The market might keep brushing this off. Until it can’t. Because every so often, even in scripted wrestling, someone takes a real hit. And when that happens in macro markets, the “replay” isn’t just painful—it’s irreversible.

So trade carefully. The ring looks safe—until it isn’t.

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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