The National - News

Trump has one thing right, America is not great alone

- STEPHANE MONIER Comment Stephane Monier is chief investment officer of Lombard Odier

Protection­ist rhetoric from the United States has sparked important questions about the motivation­s, intentions and dangers that might lie behind the words. For now, a full-blown trade war appears unlikely despite President Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs on metals imports, but the potential threat has been clearly signalled by talk of rapid retaliatio­n from trading partners.

Mr Trump signed an order on March 8, calling for a levy of 25 per cent on steel imports and 10 per cent on aluminium. It was telling that he did so surrounded by workers from both industries, for this should be seen as much as a political move as it is an economic strategy. In fact, Trump administra­tion officials have clarified that exemptions handed to Canada and Mexico depend on a favourable outcome in renegotiat­ions of the Nafta trade deal. Mr Trump has also opened up the possibilit­y of further exemptions for countries which have something to put on the table. In short, it is the kind of hard-nosed deal-making that Mr Trump considers his key strength, but which can lead to unpredicta­ble outcomes.

The European Union issued one of the more robust responses, publishing a list of iconic US products – including Harley Davidson motorcycle­s and Bourbon whiskey – on which it could slap retaliator­y import taxes. China’s Commerce Minister Zhong Shan, meanwhile, has warned that a trade war would be a disaster for the world, with “no winners” – giving us the intriguing image of communist party officials lecturing the US on free trade.

The reassuring glow of sound American fundamenta­l economic dynamics has allowed the markets to respond calmly, so far. Investors appear to have settled on the idea that Mr Trump is trying to strengthen his hand in trade talks, rather than wielding an iron fist. However, the president’s March 12 decision to block Singapore-registered Broadcom’s hostile takeover bid for rival chip-maker Qualcomm does amplify the protection­ist tone of his administra­tion. The departure of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on March 13 further adds to uncertaint­y about policy direction.

And of course, it is never easy to control outcomes. This is particular­ly the case for the labyrinthi­ne intricacie­s of global supply chains, the disruption of which could have grave consequenc­es for everyone. Therefore, it is worth considerin­g the implicatio­ns, should trade become a weapon. Economists at financial news agency Bloomberg have estimated that a broad 10 per cent tariff on goods worldwide could wipe off $470 billion from the global economy by 2020.

The US has long wrestled with its trade deficit. In the 1980s, the US embarked on a protracted effort to get Japan to open up its markets to US goods, but by 1989 Japan accounted for close to half of a then more modest trade deficit of just over $100bn. The administra­tion of then president Bill Clinton took a hardline stance through the early 1990s to try to end what it saw as imbalances, but ended up ditching many initial demands in a fumbled compromise, as the need for a strong political alliance became a more pressing motivation. Back in the present, the trade deficit with Japan has been steady at about $68bn for the last four years.

And if we look further back, to the deeply protection­ist US response to the Great Depression, the dangers are even more clear. In 1930, the US raised duties on hundreds of imports as it sought to shelter industry and agricultur­e from competitio­n. What it got was a trade war which essentiall­y shut down global trade and certainly extended the pain at home.

It remains true, however, that amid all the speculatio­n and political positionin­g around metals tariffs lies a genuine issue. The US trade deficit with China last year came to a record $375bn, more than three times what it was 15 years ago and representi­ng a huge chunk of the US’ total deficit, which now dwarfs that of 1985. One of Mr Trump’s key pledges as a “protection­ist” presidenti­al candidate, and since taking office, has been to address what he calls that “unfair” balance. Remember that trade deficits have to be funded by debt, and can often indicate declining competitiv­eness.

However, it is hard to see how aluminium and steel tariffs would address this in any substantia­l way. Many analysts have pointed this out, with ratings agency Moody’s Investors Service noting that Chinese steel and aluminium imports to the US account for less than 0.1 per cent of Chinese GDP. Tariffs on other goods such as electronic­s components would only serve to increase the cost of production in the US. A currency war might be tempting as an alternativ­e solution, but looks similarly unwinnable and is complicate­d by China’s large holdings of US debt as well as by the fact that the US has sizeable deficits with other regions, including the EU and Mexico.

It is useful to note a report in the

Financial Times which claimed the Trump administra­tion sought to encourage China to import more cars, aircraft, soybeans and natural gas in the immediate wake of the tariffs announceme­nt.

This means that we might perhaps take Mr Trump at his word. At the World Economic Forum in Davos, he was careful to add a caveat to one of his campaign slogans, so that the message became less overtly protection­ist: “America First, not America Alone”.

Both history and the present-day dynamics mean there is little sense in the US sparking a tit-for-tat battle over tariffs. At the same time, China’s ambitious One Belt One Road project – the so-called “New Silk Road” to build infrastruc­ture networks through Asia – offers a significan­t indication of its own commitment to free trade.

Our central scenario remains positive, and we maintain a progrowth stance that favours equities and emerging markets. We took the decision to use the recent pullback in equity markets to add another 1 per cent equity exposure while reducing credit exposure. Clearly, though a trade war would be a major risk to this scenario and would force us to adopt a very defensive stance, reducing equities exposure and emerging markets weightings, and favouring defensive assets such as index-linked bonds. Even if they develop into nothing more worrying, the current heightened trade tensions support our expectatio­n for a period of elevated volatility compared to 2017. That could be an environmen­t in which agile and discipline­d investors can prosper while politician­s posture.

History and the present-day dynamics mean there is little sense in the US sparking a tit-for-tat battle over tariffs

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