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Treasury Yields Rise as Markets Weigh Tariff Fallout and Await Trump’s Address

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The Treasury market is being pulled in opposing directions — tariff-driven inflation risk on one side and geopolitical safe-haven demand on the other — leaving yields modestly higher but directionally uncertain.


U.S. Treasury yields ticked up Tuesday as investors reassessed trade policy risk following last week’s Supreme Court ruling against President Donald Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and prepared for his State of the Union address.

The benchmark 10-year yield rose about 1 basis point to 4.042%. The 30-year bond yield gained less than 1 basis point to 4.704%, while the 2-year note climbed nearly 2 basis points to 3.457%. Because yields move inversely to prices, the move signals mild selling pressure in government bonds rather than a sharp repositioning.

While the adjustments were small in absolute terms, the underlying drivers are structurally significant.

On Friday, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled 6-3 that Trump had improperly relied on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose broad “reciprocal” tariffs. Within hours, the president announced a new 15% universal tariff rate, though only a 10% levy has been formalized so far.

The rapid pivot underscores the administration’s determination to preserve tariff leverage despite judicial constraints. From a market perspective, that persistence reduces the probability of a near-term de-escalation in trade friction.

Trump’s comments Monday — warning that countries attempting to “play games” would face even higher duties — added to the sense that trade tensions remain an active policy instrument rather than a negotiating tactic nearing resolution.

Inflation Channel vs. Growth Channel

For bond markets, tariffs matter through two primary transmission mechanisms.

First, the inflation channel. Higher import duties can raise input costs for manufacturers and retailers. If companies pass those costs through, headline inflation may rise, complicating the Federal Reserve’s path back toward its 2% target. That risk is particularly relevant for the 2-year note, which is closely tied to expectations for short-term policy rates.

Second, the growth channel. Escalating tariffs can dampen global trade volumes, reduce corporate margins, and delay capital expenditure decisions. That drag can weigh on GDP growth and corporate earnings, which tends to support Treasurys via safe-haven demand.

The modest steepening across the curve suggests investors are currently giving slightly more weight to inflation risk than to an outright growth shock, though neither force is dominant.

Term Premium and Supply Dynamics

Beyond immediate macro implications, the longer end of the curve is sensitive to fiscal expectations and Treasury supply.

If Trump outlines additional fiscal measures in his address — such as infrastructure spending, industrial subsidies, or tax adjustments — markets may reassess borrowing needs. Higher projected issuance can lift the term premium, pushing 10- and 30-year yields higher independently of near-term rate expectations.

Recent Treasury auctions have seen mixed demand metrics, and foreign participation remains closely watched. With trade tensions escalating, the question of whether major trading partners maintain steady purchases of U.S. debt carries strategic importance, even if no immediate disruption has materialized.

Geopolitical tensions have added a separate layer of complexity. Speculation about a potential U.S. strike on Iran has contributed to intermittent safe-haven flows into Treasurys. Analysts at Deutsche Bank noted that the risk-off tone has supported demand for government bonds at times, limiting upward pressure on yields.

Such geopolitical catalysts often compress yields temporarily, particularly at the long end, as investors seek liquidity and safety. However, if tensions were to push energy prices materially higher, the inflation implications could reverse that dynamic.

Dollar, Equities, and Cross-Asset Signals

Treasury movements cannot be read in isolation. The dollar’s resilience and equity market performance help contextualize the bond market’s response.

A stronger dollar can offset some imported inflation by lowering the cost of foreign goods in domestic currency terms. Meanwhile, equity volatility serves as a gauge of risk sentiment. If stocks begin to price in a sharper trade-related slowdown, a more pronounced rally in Treasurys could follow.

So far, the relatively muted bond move suggests markets view the tariff escalation as economically material but not yet systemic.

Trump’s address to Congress will be scrutinized for clarity on three fronts: the timeline for raising tariffs to 15%, potential sector-specific measures, and broader fiscal priorities.

Any signals suggesting expanded use of alternative trade authorities, such as Section 122 of the Trade Act, could reinforce expectations of sustained tariff policy. Conversely, hints of negotiation frameworks or exemptions might temper rate volatility.

Investors will also watch for commentary on inflation, manufacturing, energy policy, and defense spending, all of which intersect with bond market fundamentals.

The Treasury market is not reacting to a single shock but to an evolving policy regime. Judicial intervention has not curtailed tariff strategy; it has redirected it. Inflation risks remain plausible, growth risks are non-trivial, and geopolitical uncertainty persists.

The result is a market in suspension, yields edging higher, but without conviction, as investors wait for clearer signals on whether trade escalation becomes entrenched policy or a transitional phase in a broader negotiation cycle.

China Adopts Measured Stance on Trump’s New 15% Global Tariff, Signals Openness to Talks While Keeping Retaliatory Options Open

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China is closely monitoring the implications of President Donald Trump’s new 15% universal tariff on all imports and will decide “in due course” whether to adjust countermeasures, a commerce ministry official said Tuesday, a day after Trump raised the temporary levy from 10% to 15% under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act.

According to Reuters, the official reiterated Beijing’s opposition to unilateral tariffs and urged the United States to “cancel unilateral tariffs and refrain from further imposing such tariffs.” At the same time, the ministry expressed willingness to hold “frank consultations” during the sixth round of U.S.-China economic and trade talks, without specifying timing or location.

Trump’s latest move came in direct response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling Friday invalidating his prior use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose broad tariffs. That decision dismantled duties of 10–50% on goods from dozens of countries, including a 20% rate on Chinese imports. The court held that IEEPA does not authorize unilateral import taxes absent a specific, imminent foreign threat.

Imports from China had been subject to the 20% IEEPA tariff (10% reciprocal + 10% fentanyl-related). The Supreme Court ruling implies a net reduction of around 5% in effective tariffs on Chinese goods, according to Goldman Sachs analysis. Global Trade Alert estimates China’s trade-weighted average tariff rate drops 7.1 percentage points under the new Section 122 regime — one of the largest relief effects among major U.S. trading partners.

China’s Retaliatory History and Current Posture

Beijing imposed multiple rounds of counter-tariffs on U.S. goods in 2025, targeting agricultural commodities (soybeans, pork, cotton), energy (LNG, crude oil), and industrial products. It also leveraged its dominance in rare earths to restrict exports of critical minerals, causing supply-chain disruptions in U.S. manufacturing.

Most retaliatory measures were suspended in November 2025 after a trade truce negotiated by Presidents Trump and Xi Jinping in South Korea. That agreement included a U.S. pledge to postpone a sweeping rule barring shipments to thousands of Chinese firms and China’s commitment to certain market-access concessions.

The commerce ministry’s measured tone on Tuesday suggests Beijing intends to preserve the truce while preparing contingency options. Analysts see the 5–7 percentage point effective tariff relief as reducing immediate pressure on Chinese exporters, though the new 15% baseline still exceeds pre-2025 levels for many goods.

Upcoming Trump-Xi Summit in Focus

Trump is scheduled to visit Beijing from March 31 to April 2, 2026 — his first trip to China since 2017 — for highly anticipated talks with President Xi. Xi is also expected to make a state visit to Washington later in the year. The Supreme Court ruling weakens Trump’s tariff leverage at a critical moment.

Analysts say China is likely to:

  • Push for removal of remaining 10% fentanyl-linked tariffs.
  • Seek easing of technology export controls on advanced chips and semiconductor equipment.
  • Press for reduced U.S. support for Taiwan, including arms sales and official contacts.
  • Demand removal of certain Chinese entities from U.S. sanctions lists.

Xi asserted during a recent phone call that Taiwan is “the most important issue” in U.S.-China relations. Minxin Pei of Claremont McKenna College predicts Xi may offer concessions on U.S. agricultural and energy purchases in exchange for a statement on Taiwan that Beijing could portray as a diplomatic victory.

Scott Kennedy of the Center for Strategic and International Studies noted the ruling has “limited impact” on the overall U.S.-China relationship because “China had already gained the upper hand.” He expects the April summit to yield modest outcomes — perhaps an extension of the truce and increased U.S. product sales — but little progress on structural issues like technology controls or economic rebalancing.

U.S. Contingency Plans and Ongoing Probes

USTR Jamieson Greer defended the continuity of existing trade deals, insisting the ruling affected only IEEPA-based tariffs. The administration has launched new Section 301 investigations covering pharmaceuticals, industrial overcapacity, forced labor, digital services taxes, and discrimination against U.S. tech and digital goods — signaling a shift to more targeted tools.

Trump warned on Truth Social of additional tariffs in the coming months under alternative authorities. The temporary 15% levy expires in 150 days unless Congress approves extensions or new legislation.

The coming weeks will test whether diplomacy can stabilize U.S.-China ties — or whether renewed tariff battles under alternative authorities reignite global trade tensions. With the April summit looming, both sides are maneuvering carefully: Trump seeks commercial wins and leverage on fentanyl and trade deficits, while Xi prioritizes Taiwan and technology access.

The Supreme Court’s intervention has reshaped the negotiating table, giving China a stronger hand on core geopolitical issues while forcing the U.S. to adapt its tariff strategy. The outcome will likely influence not only bilateral trade flows but also the broader trajectory of U.S.-China relations in 2026 and beyond.

Crypto Markets Slide Below $63,000 as Tariff Fears And AI Disruption Shake Investor Confidence

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The price of cryptocurrencies have declined sharply amid renewed tariff tensions and rising anxiety over the global impact of artificial intelligence on markets.

Bitcoin saw a significant decline, sending its price below $63,000 on Tuesday, with analysts attributing the downturn to a mix of macro shocks that rattled the already fragile market sentiment.

“Bitcoin’s move below $63,000 appears to reflect a broad deterioration in crypto sentiment rather than a single fundamental catalyst,” said Min Jung, associate researcher at Presto Research. “In the near term, macro headlines, particularly around tariffs and renewed geopolitical uncertainty, are reinforcing a risk-off tone across digital assets.”

“What stands out, however, is that crypto has recently underperformed even as traditional risk assets have remained relatively resilient. That divergence suggests this is not purely a macro-driven selloff, but also a function of weak marginal demand, thinner liquidity conditions, and continued deleveraging within crypto native markets”, he added.

Bitcoin has reportedly fallen more than 50% from its October 2025 peak. The broader crypto market also followed suit, with total capitalization dropping over 4% overnight to $2.19 trillion.

Market sentiment deteriorated further as the Fear and Greed Index compiled by CoinMarketCap slipped to 11, signaling extreme fear. The reading declined from 14 just a day earlier, reflecting widespread bearishness across asset classes and regions.

Analysts attributed the downturn largely to capital outflows from the crypto ecosystem. Weak demand among U.S. investors has been cited as a key factor behind Bitcoin’s inability to sustain upward momentum.

Although often promoted as a hedge against financial instability, Bitcoin has recently mirrored risk assets, declining alongside the S&P 500 during periods of heightened volatility.

The digital asset’s current valuation marks a sharp reversal from late 2025, when optimism surrounding the election victory of Donald Trump fueled expectations of crypto-friendly regulatory policies. Recall that Bitcoin surged above $126,000 in October 2025 but has since retraced to levels last seen before that political shift.

The recent selloff has also affected its relative standing among global assets, pushing it down to the 13th position by market capitalization. According to Michael Saylor, CEO of Strategy, Bitcoin is currently in what he describes as its “wilderness” phase.

He compares the digital asset’s trajectory to early skepticism surrounding companies such as Amazon and Apple, arguing that mainstream validation could eventually follow though potentially after the most substantial gains have passed.

Technically, market watchers are increasingly cautious. Bitcoin is approaching a potential death cross formation on the three-day chart, a signal historically associated with extended downward trends. Analysts warn that if historical patterns repeat, the market could be entering the final downward phase of the current cycle.

Outlook

Near-term prospects for cryptocurrencies remain closely tied to macroeconomic sentiment and global risk appetite. Persistent tariff tensions, shifting capital flows, and uncertainty surrounding AI-driven market disruptions are likely to continue influencing investor behavior.

However, periods of extreme fear have historically preceded stabilization phases in digital asset markets. A sustained recovery would likely require renewed institutional inflows, clearer regulatory direction, or a broader rebound in global equity markets. Until such catalysts emerge, price action may remain volatile, with investors closely monitoring technical indicators and liquidity trends for signs of a structural turnaround.

If Bitcoin demonstrates resilience during the current climate of extreme fear, it could reframe market sentiment and trigger gradual capital reallocation. Conversely, failure to establish support at current levels may reinforce bearish momentum in the weeks ahead.

Moody’s Zandi Warns Elevated Asset Prices Could Reverse as Economic Signals Weaken

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Mark Zandi warns that elevated valuations, rising speculative behavior, and fragile Treasury market dynamics could combine to trigger a sell-off severe enough to spill from Wall Street into the broader U.S. economy.


The U.S. stock market has wavered in 2026 as investors juggle tariff uncertainty, artificial intelligence–driven volatility, and persistent inflation pressures. But for Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, the risks extend well beyond routine market swings.

Zandi, whose commentary typically centers on macroeconomic fundamentals rather than equity price action, said recent developments have pushed him to issue an unusually direct warning. In a thread on X, he argued that markets may be entering a destabilizing phase in which asset prices detach from underlying economic performance.

“There are times when I feel markets are overdone and increasingly disconnected from the economy,” Zandi wrote. “Markets risk moving in a big way, causality is reversed, and falling asset prices threaten an already vulnerable economy. This is one of those times.”

Speculation and stretched valuations

Zandi’s concern begins with valuations. By conventional metrics such as price-to-earnings ratios and equity risk premiums, U.S. stocks remain elevated relative to long-term averages. Investors have justified these levels with expectations of productivity gains from artificial intelligence and resilient corporate earnings.

Zandi does not dispute the existence of supportive fundamentals. However, he argues that speculative momentum is increasingly driving price formation.

“Valuations are high,” he wrote. “There are good fundamental reasons for this, but markets appear increasingly tainted by speculation. That is, investors are simply investing on the faith that prices will rise quickly in the future because they have in the recent past.”

Such dynamics can amplify volatility. When prices rise primarily because of price trends — rather than incremental improvements in earnings, productivity, or cash flow — they become more sensitive to negative shocks. A policy surprise, geopolitical escalation, or weaker-than-expected data release can quickly reverse sentiment.

Risk not confined to equities

Zandi’s warning is notable because he does not limit the vulnerability to equities or other traditional risk assets. He also flagged safe-haven assets, including gold and silver, that have rallied amid geopolitical uncertainty and concerns over fiscal sustainability. He included cryptocurrencies in the same broad risk category.

The implication is that asset inflation may be systemic rather than sector-specific. In such an environment, diversification provides less protection if liquidity conditions tighten or investor psychology shifts broadly toward risk aversion.

Mixed macro backdrop

At the core of Zandi’s thesis is what he characterizes as a fragile macroeconomic foundation.

Real gross domestic product is expanding slightly above 2%, according to recent data, below his estimate of the economy’s potential growth rate of roughly 2.5%. Employment growth has slowed, and he noted that the unemployment rate has been edging higher. Inflation, measured by the Federal Reserve’s preferred personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index, remains near 3%, a level he described as “stubbornly and uncomfortably high.”

This combination — modest growth, softening labor markets, and persistent inflation — limits policy flexibility. If growth slows further, the Federal Reserve faces pressure to ease monetary policy. If inflation remains elevated, rate cuts could risk reigniting price pressures.

Treasury market fragility

Zandi also pointed to a less discussed vulnerability: the structure of demand in the U.S. Treasury market.

The Treasury market is widely viewed as the global risk-free benchmark, anchoring mortgage rates, corporate borrowing costs, and sovereign debt pricing worldwide. However, Zandi expressed concern about the growing role of leveraged institutional investors, including hedge funds, in absorbing supply.

While he praised the appointment of Kevin Warsh to lead the Federal Reserve, he cautioned that concentrated or leveraged participation in Treasurys could amplify volatility if sentiment shifts.

Suppose hedge funds and other nontraditional buyers were to retreat simultaneously — whether due to economic fears, margin calls, or regulatory shifts — Treasury prices could fall sharply. Because yields move inversely to prices, such a move would push interest rates higher across the curve.

The transmission to the real economy would be direct. Higher Treasury yields raise mortgage rates, increase borrowing costs for businesses, and pressure equity valuations by increasing discount rates applied to future earnings. For households, that could translate into weaker housing demand and slower consumption, and could curtail capital investment and hiring for corporations.

Feedback loop risk

Zandi’s most serious warning concerns what economists describe as a negative feedback loop. In normal conditions, asset prices respond to economic fundamentals. In stressed environments, the relationship can invert: falling asset prices weaken economic activity, which then justifies further declines in asset prices.

Such episodes are rare but consequential. They typically require three elements: elevated valuations, economic vulnerability, and concentrated or leveraged financial positioning. Zandi suggests all three may be present.

The current market environment is not in crisis. GDP continues to grow, inflation is below its 2022 peak, and financial institutions remain well capitalized by regulatory standards. Yet Zandi’s argument is that the margin for error is narrowing.

In his assessment, the greater risk lies not in a gradual slowdown but in a rapid repricing of assets that tightens financial conditions faster than policymakers or markets anticipate. If that occurs, Wall Street volatility could migrate to Main Street through higher borrowing costs, weaker hiring, and slower income growth.

EU Accuses U.S. Of Altering Tariff Deal, Signals Retaliation & Pauses Trade Deal Ratification

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The European Parliament has suspended ratification of the 2025 EU-U.S. trade agreement after Washington imposed new universal tariffs, with Bernd Lange warning the bloc is prepared to act if the deal is undermined.


Transatlantic trade relations have entered a renewed phase of uncertainty after the European Parliament paused ratification of the 2025 EU-U.S. trade agreement, citing concerns that Washington’s latest tariff actions breach the spirit and letter of the deal.

Bernd Lange, chair of the European Parliament’s international trade committee, told CNBC that the United States has altered agreed tariff commitments multiple times since the deal was concluded last summer.

“We wanted to have really stability and predictability. And unfortunately, the government, the president of the United States, has really made a breach of this deal several times,” Lange said.

The immediate trigger was the imposition of a universal 10% levy on all imports, announced by President Donald Trump after the Supreme Court of the United States struck down his earlier “reciprocal” tariffs. Trump has since indicated the rate will rise to 15%, although no formal timeline has been provided.

What the 2025 Agreement Was Meant to Deliver

The 2025 trade accord was framed as a stabilizing reset after years of tariff disputes. It set a baseline 15% tariff on most EU goods entering the U.S., while carving out exemptions for selected sectors. Steel and aluminum, along with certain derivative products, were subject to a higher 50% levy.

The architecture of the deal aimed to lock in predictability for exporters, manufacturers, and investors on both sides of the Atlantic. For the EU, it was intended to protect small and medium-sized enterprises that are particularly sensitive to tariff volatility.

Lange argues that weeks after the agreement was finalized, Washington raised tariffs on roughly 400 derivative products from 15% to 50%, creating what he described as material harm to European SMEs.

“We are sticking to the deal. A deal is a deal,” he said. “But on the U.S. side, there was a breaking [of the agreement] some weeks after the deal was concluded.”

From Brussels’ perspective, the introduction of a universal tariff layered on top of sector-specific rates effectively restructures the trade environment that negotiators had sought to stabilize.

The Supreme Court’s intervention complicates the legal terrain. While the ruling curtailed the administration’s earlier tariff mechanism, the White House responded with a new structure rather than retreating from its broader trade posture.

U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer suggested over the weekend that the administration’s policy orientation remains intact and that previously negotiated trade arrangements are still operative. European officials, however, are seeking written assurances clarifying whether the new tariff regime overrides or coexists with the 2025 agreement.

This uncertainty has direct commercial implications. Companies that structured contracts and supply chains around agreed tariff levels now face shifting cost assumptions. For industries such as automotive manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and aerospace — all heavily integrated across the Atlantic — even marginal tariff changes can alter investment decisions and pricing models.

The Anti-Coercion Instrument: A Dormant but Potent Tool

Within the EU, debate has turned to the possible activation of the bloc’s Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI), a legislative mechanism designed to counter economic pressure from third countries.

The ACI would allow Brussels to restrict access to EU public procurement markets, impose export or import controls, and potentially limit foreign direct investment flows. Although often described as a “nuclear” trade measure, it has never been deployed.

Lange indicated that while the instrument remains available, its use is not imminent.

“I would not call it bazooka … It’s a normal legislation for a specific case,” he said. “At the moment, I see the case is not given [to use it], but we have it on the table. If necessary, we will use it.”

Member states are divided. Export-driven economies such as Germany and Italy are cautious about escalation, given the scale of transatlantic trade and the exposure of their industrial sectors to U.S. demand. France has been more vocal about maintaining leverage.

Economic Stakes on Both Sides

The U.S. and EU together account for one of the largest bilateral trade relationships globally, spanning goods, services, and investment flows. The integration is particularly dense in high-value sectors where components cross borders multiple times before final assembly.

A universal 10% — potentially 15% — tariff alters the cost calculus across that network. European exporters face higher entry costs into the U.S. market, while American importers may pass increased costs to consumers or absorb them through margin compression.

President Trump warned Monday that countries that “want to play games” could face higher duties in the coming months, reinforcing the prospect of additional measures.

The core issue is not solely the level of tariffs for Brussels but the predictability of policy. The 2025 agreement was designed to anchor expectations over a multi-year horizon. Lange has called for formal assurances that no further tariff changes will be introduced for at least three years.

“We need clarity,” he said.

The pause in ratification places the dispute squarely within the EU’s institutional framework. Without parliamentary approval, full implementation of the agreement cannot proceed, limiting legal certainty for businesses.