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Market Watch: How Trump’s Tariff Strategy Could Reshape This Rally

Ever since Donald Trump became the 47th U.S. president-elect this past Election Day, the stock market has been on a tear. Clearly, investors believe that his pro-growth policies will benefit both the U.S. economy and stock market over the next few years.

Now, thankfully, we don’t have to guess how a Trump presidency will impact stocks. We can just look back at how stocks did throughout 2017, 2018, and 2019 to determine how they may perform over the next few years. (Note: we’re excluding 2020 from this analysis due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a unique phenomenon unlikely to repeat in the next four years.) 

So – how did stocks do during Trump’s first term in office?

In short, they soared in 2017 on improved economic growth and lower taxes, then stumbled in 2018 as new tariffs caused reinflation. In 2019, stocks recovered as tariffs eased, inflation fell, and the Federal Reserve began cutting rates. 

And from where things stand today, a repeat of that performance seems quite possible. 

A Lookback at the Era of Trump 1.0

Specifically, in 2017, we saw an immediate acceleration in GDP from 2% to 4.6%. This caused some reinflation, but the market didn’t care much. Economic reacceleration was the story of the year; stocks soared. 

But then the first big batch of tariffs arrived in early 2018 – and everything changed. 

First, there were the 30% to 50% tariffs enacted on solar panels and washing machines in January. Then, in March, we got a 25% steel tariff and 10% aluminum tariff. Those escalated and expanded into June 2018. 

Steel prices spiked by about 50% in the first half of 2018. Aluminum prices jumped around 30%. The entire Bloomberg Commodity Index – a strong gauge of all commodity prices – rose about 10% in the first half of 2018, mostly due to the tariffs increasing prices and stalling global trade. 

And as a result, inflation started to become a problem once again. It rose from ~2% to ~3% in the first half of 2018, which forced the Federal Reserve to get more aggressive with its rate-hiking cycle. Indeed, the central bank hiked interest rates four times in 2018 to fight tariff-fueled reinflation.

Higher prices and higher rates weighed on the economy. GDP slowed from 4.6% at the end of 2017 to 0.6% at the end of 2018. 

The combination of higher prices, higher rates, and falling growth spooked investors and led to a violent ~20% market crash between September and December 2018.

In response to the market volatility and slowing growth conditions, the Fed stopped hiking rates in early 2019. Simultaneously, Trump started rolling back certain tariffs, particularly steel and aluminum tariffs on Canada and Mexico. 

Inflation eased. The Fed cut rates. The economy restrengthened, with GDP recovering to 4.8% by late 2019. And the stock market soared. 

The Final Word on What’s Ahead for Stocks

So… in the Trump 1.0 era… we had a tug-of-war between faster economic growth and higher inflation, with inflation only becoming a problem when big tariffs arrived in 2018. 

That is why investors and economists are so squarely focused on Trump’s tariff policy. There was a lot of talk on the campaign trail about big tariffs. Specifically, Donald Trump wants to institute a 20% tariff on all imports and tariffs of up to 50% to 100% on Chinese imports. If he follows through, we could see a repeat of 2018 (or worse).

But, of course, there’s campaign talk… and then there’s presidential walk. And we find it highly unlikely that those big tariffs are implemented in the Trump 2.0 era.

Rather, we think we will see a scaled-back version of the tariffs we got in 2018 – which should mean less reinflation and less market volatility.

Nonetheless, investors should remain vigilant. 

For now – just like it did in 2017 – the stock market will push higher on optimism for pro-growth policies and lower corporate taxes. 

Pay close to attention to what rhetoric turns into policy. If very little of that tariff rhetoric becomes policy, this market could remain on the launching pad for a few years. 

Learn which stocks we’re considering closely to potentially win big in this market rally.

On the date of publication, Luke Lango did not have (either directly or indirectly) any positions in the securities mentioned in this article.

P.S. You can stay up to speed with Luke’s latest market analysis by reading our Daily Notes! Check out the latest issue on your Innovation Investor or Early Stage Investor subscriber site.

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