President Trump’s epic tariff retreat shows there is no grand strategy for revolutionizing global trade, and that he’s governing — as he always has — through gut instinct.
Why it matters: Trump’s allies see a genius at work. His critics see a madman steering the economy toward crisis. And Wall Street sees, for the first time in weeks, a president who is receptive to external pain.
The big picture: Trump’s stunning 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs — announced just one week after “Liberation Day” — caught virtually the entire world by surprise.
- In one fell swoop, Trump shelved his maximalist tariff ambitions, intensified his trade war with China, and unleashed one of the biggest stock market rallies since World War II.
- The tariff climbdown was vintage Trump: chaotic in execution, dramatic in tone, and instantly rebranded as a MAGA masterstroke.
What they’re saying: “Many of you in the media clearly missed the art of the deal. You clearly failed to see what President Trump is doing here,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt scolded reporters.
- “You have been watching the greatest economic master strategy from an American President in history,” tweeted White House adviser Stephen Miller.
Zoom in: The thinking in MAGA world goes like this: By imposing tariffs on every country in the world, Trump has gained leverage over the 75+ trading partners who have approached the White House eager to make a deal.
- China — which did not cooperate, and instead retaliated with its own 84% tariffs on the U.S. — has exposed itself as a “bad actor,” argued Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
- “This was [Trump’s] strategy all along. You might even say that he goaded China into a bad position,” Bessent said, repeatedly denying that the market reaction played any role in the walk back.
Reality check: Plenty of Trump-friendly investors, such as hedge fund titan Bill Ackman, are thrilled with this development. But there’s little evidence that it was the master plan all along.
- When an errant headline claimed Monday that Trump was considering a 90-day pause for all countries except China, the White House blasted it as “fake news.”
- That same day, Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro wrote in the Financial Times: “This is not a negotiation. For the U.S., it is a national emergency triggered by trade deficits caused by a rigged system.”
- As recently as Wednesday, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer spent hours on Capitol Hill publicly defending Trump’s reciprocal tariffs — only to have the rug pulled out from under him in the middle of a hearing.
Between the lines: Whether or not Trump’s plan was always to pause the tariffs for negotiations, the reality is that he was facing massive pressure on multiple fronts leading up to the decision.
- Five polls conducted entirely after “Liberation Day” showed a significant dip in Trump’s approval rating, with a consistent majority of Americans expressing opposition to his tariff plans.
- MAGA influencers who played a major role in Trump’s election were in open revolt as the stock market melted down, wiping out trillions of dollars in value.
- Corporate leaders privately flooded Trump officials with phone calls, urging the administration to be more tactical. Trump admitted to watching JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon sound the alarm on Fox Business.
- Top financial institutions raised the odds of a recession, and — in what may have been the final straw — bond yields soared and triggered fears of a potential debt crisis.
The intrigue: Trump contradicted his own surrogates when he acknowledged Wednesday that he was concerned traders were “getting a little bit yippy, a little bit afraid” — and that “you have to have flexibility.”
- “The bond market is very tricky. I was watching it. But if you look at it now, it’s beautiful,” Trump told reporters after his tariff reversal.
- In a hot mic moment as the market surged Wednesday, Trump mused to a Republican senator: “[Dow] up 2,500 points. Nobody has ever heard of it. Gotta be a record.”
The bottom line: Trump’s gut move may have saved the stock market — but it left the global trading system and American businesses in a state of whiplash.
- Tariffs are still much higher than they were a week ago, the U.S. in a full-on trade war with China, and recession is very much still a possibility.
- And now, a new question has emerged for CEOs and investors: When and why should they trust Trump?