Trump’s Tariff Tactics Backfire, Unleash Bond Market Chaos: Analysts. Bitcoin’s Economic Resilience Shines Amid Global Uncertainty.

Analysts are criticizing the financial implications of US President Donald Trump’s import tariffs, a development that some say highlights Bitcoin’s unique economic properties during times of global uncertainty. Trump’s 90-day pause on higher reciprocal tariffs, reverting them to a 10% baseline for most countries except China, has exposed vulnerabilities in the US bond market, according to critics. Economist and author of The Bitcoin Standard, Saifedean Ammous, said Trump’s decision to reverse the higher tariffs was likely a reaction to rising bond yields, suggesting the administration’s hand was forced. “Trump fought the bond market and the bond market won,” Ammous said in an April 23 X post. “The gambit seemed to work for the first day, and the huge crash in the stock market was presented as a small price to pay for fiscal sustainability.” “But then the bonds began to crash, and it became clear how disastrous the tariffs were, and how wrong it was to expect that deliberately crashing the stock market would boost the bond market,” he added. Following Trump’s tariff announcement, the 10-year Treasury yield surged from under 4% to 4.5%, CNBC data shows, amid a sell-off driven by inflation and recession concerns. “The rise in yields was the exact opposite of what the administration wanted, and reversing course on the tariffs half a day after they go into effect was absolutely devastating for Trump’s negotiating position,” Ammous said. Some analysts, including Global Macro Investor founder Raoul Pal, have suggested the tariff maneuvering may only be “posturing” for the US to reach a trade agreement with China. Delays in reaching a trade agreement may limit the recovery of both equity and cryptocurrency markets, which hinge on the outcomes of the trade negotiations, according to Nansen analysts. Meanwhile, Bitcoin (BTC) is acting “less like a tech stock and more like a hedge against economic uncertainty,” after Trump signaled a “substantial reduction in tariffs on Chinese goods,” Nexo dispatch analyst Iliya Kalchev told Cointelegraph. The situation has revived long-standing proposals to back the US dollar with Bitcoin. Ammous said the US should keep buying BTC until the government holds enough to fully back the dollar supply, ultimately switching to a Bitcoin standard. Historically, the dollar was backed by gold and redeemable for a fixed amount of the precious metal until 1933, when US President Franklin D. Roosevelt suspended gold convertibility in response to the Great Depression. In 1971, President Richard Nixon halted the dollar’s convertibility into gold, aiming to protect the US gold reserves and to stabilize the economy, marking the beginning of the fiat currency system, which remains in place today. Bitcoin’s fixed supply, which is hard-coded in its tokenomics, makes it a popular digital competitor to gold. Joe Burnett, director of market research at Unchained, predicted that Bitcoin may rival or surpass gold’s market capitalization in the next decade, projecting the Bitcoin price will surpass $1.8 million by 2035.

In Trend

Cardinal Kevin Farrell steps into spotlight as camerlengo following Pope Francis’s death, overseeing Vatican during interregnum.

Upbit and Bithumb halt Synthetix token deposits amid sUSD risks, South Korean exchanges take cautionary steps.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *