Is President Donald Trump’s threat of a 100% tariff on China a serious policy proposal or an “outlandish and ridiculous” figure designed purely for negotiation? This is the central question facing analysts and investors, who are struggling to determine the true intent behind a number that would effectively shut down U.S.-China trade.
Market strategist Michael Brown of Pepperstone floated the idea that this could be a deliberate strategy. He suggested that threatening “outlandish and ridiculous tariff figures” can be a way to “focus minds, extract concessions… and ultimately come to agreement faster.” In this view, the 100% figure is not the goal, but a tool to achieve a different goal.
The sheer scale of the threat lends some credibility to this theory. A 100% tariff on all Chinese goods would be an economic earthquake, causing massive disruptions and price hikes for U.S. consumers and businesses. The economic self-harm would be so great that it leads some to believe it could not be a serious, long-term policy.
However, the market is not treating it as a bluff. The massive $2 trillion selloff on Wall Street shows that investors are taking the threat at face value, or at least assigning a significant probability that the administration might follow through. The risk of miscalculation is simply too high to ignore.
China, too, is responding as if the threat is real. Its promise of “resolute measures” indicates it is preparing for the worst, not assuming that the “outlandish” figure is just a negotiating tactic. Whether a bluff or not, the threat has already done real damage to market stability and pushed the two countries closer to a dangerous confrontation.
