TACO!

Hints.... :auiqs.jpg:

BANGKOK (AP) — China did not back down Monday in a back-and-forth with the U.S. over trade, calling for U.S. President Donald Trump to withdraw his latest threat of a 100% tariff and other export control measures announced over the weekend.
No worries. He will chicken out. He always does.
 
No worries. He will chicken out. He always does.
Chinese sombrero futures are hot.

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TACO is backing down from his 100% tariff on China. After only one business day!

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/—-/ President Trump just ended war number 8 in only 9 months. That’s more than your loser democRAT presidents could hope to do. So, call him all the names you want, your party is a bunch of losers,
 
You have it backwards. Nobody takes Trump seriously when it comes to XI or Putin. Trump always backs down. Just like yesterday.
lol! That’s why there is a summit. It must have been so tough that Trump brokered a peace deal between Israel and Palinstine. Sorry, that must have hurt. Peace isn’t your goal, hate, division, hurting our country is your goal.
 
You have it backwards. Nobody takes Trump seriously when it comes to XI or Putin. Trump always backs down. Just like yesterday.
I’m sorry v what? Allowing Putin and Xi to rule the world like they did under xiden?

I get Xiden’s policies made your third world closer to Xiden…and far more dependant since he shut down keystone…but don’t sell us out because you are little subject of a king that doesn’t care about you
 

Small businesses are being crushed by Trump’s tariffs and economists say it’s a warning for the economy​

“Everybody believes that I’m a fighter, so I’m fighting it,” Varma told CNBC in an interview. “We’ve reduced some salaries. We had planned to hire some people we’re not going to hire anymore. … If things don’t look good, especially after increasing the prices, and we don’t get the sales, then obviously we may lay off some people, as well.”

AV Universal is just one of the many small businesses that are buckling under Trump’s global trade war, struggling to pay the sudden increase in duties and forecast what’s ahead as policy evolves. Businesses of all sizes have raised prices and negotiated with vendors to weather the tariff storm and many larger retailers have so far proven resilient, with minimal impact to their profitability and future growth outlooks. Better-than-expected quarterly reports have led investors to largely shrug off the tariff threat, as the S&P 500 hovers near record highs.

But the higher costs have hit smaller companies harder because they have fewer levers to pull than their larger competitors. Their margins are slimmer, their supply chains less diverse and their negotiating power with vendors dampened by the smaller sizes of their orders.

Small businesses owners interviewed by CNBC said they largely expect to be able to manage higher costs from tariffs by raising prices, but only if it doesn’t cause shoppers to buy less — which most are already starting to see.

U.S. consumers bearing more than half the cost of tariffs so far, Goldman Sachs says​


Dotard is ruining the good economy he inherited.
 

Small businesses are being crushed by Trump’s tariffs and economists say it’s a warning for the economy​

“Everybody believes that I’m a fighter, so I’m fighting it,” Varma told CNBC in an interview. “We’ve reduced some salaries. We had planned to hire some people we’re not going to hire anymore. … If things don’t look good, especially after increasing the prices, and we don’t get the sales, then obviously we may lay off some people, as well.”

AV Universal is just one of the many small businesses that are buckling under Trump’s global trade war, struggling to pay the sudden increase in duties and forecast what’s ahead as policy evolves. Businesses of all sizes have raised prices and negotiated with vendors to weather the tariff storm and many larger retailers have so far proven resilient, with minimal impact to their profitability and future growth outlooks. Better-than-expected quarterly reports have led investors to largely shrug off the tariff threat, as the S&P 500 hovers near record highs.

But the higher costs have hit smaller companies harder because they have fewer levers to pull than their larger competitors. Their margins are slimmer, their supply chains less diverse and their negotiating power with vendors dampened by the smaller sizes of their orders.

Small businesses owners interviewed by CNBC said they largely expect to be able to manage higher costs from tariffs by raising prices, but only if it doesn’t cause shoppers to buy less — which most are already starting to see.

U.S. consumers bearing more than half the cost of tariffs so far, Goldman Sachs says​


Dotard is ruining the good economy he inherited.
it wasnt that good....
 
You have it backwards. Nobody takes Trump seriously when it comes to XI or Putin. Trump always backs down. Just like yesterday.
Trump initiates opportunities. Not all are successful. The point is he is attempting to improve a situation. When you talk royalty, it is the old school lifetime politicians who are more akin to thinking that way. The endless political backroom deals and the ceremonial signings is a hallmark of ours and other political systems. Trump does it only differently and in rapid fashion. His administration is good at this point. They keep moving on to the next issue or agenda while the Progs are still harping on issues or agendas in the past.
 

Small businesses are being crushed by Trump’s tariffs and economists say it’s a warning for the economy​

“Everybody believes that I’m a fighter, so I’m fighting it,” Varma told CNBC in an interview. “We’ve reduced some salaries. We had planned to hire some people we’re not going to hire anymore. … If things don’t look good, especially after increasing the prices, and we don’t get the sales, then obviously we may lay off some people, as well.”

AV Universal is just one of the many small businesses that are buckling under Trump’s global trade war, struggling to pay the sudden increase in duties and forecast what’s ahead as policy evolves. Businesses of all sizes have raised prices and negotiated with vendors to weather the tariff storm and many larger retailers have so far proven resilient, with minimal impact to their profitability and future growth outlooks. Better-than-expected quarterly reports have led investors to largely shrug off the tariff threat, as the S&P 500 hovers near record highs.

But the higher costs have hit smaller companies harder because they have fewer levers to pull than their larger competitors. Their margins are slimmer, their supply chains less diverse and their negotiating power with vendors dampened by the smaller sizes of their orders.

Small businesses owners interviewed by CNBC said they largely expect to be able to manage higher costs from tariffs by raising prices, but only if it doesn’t cause shoppers to buy less — which most are already starting to see.

U.S. consumers bearing more than half the cost of tariffs so far, Goldman Sachs says​


Dotard is ruining the good economy he inherited.
Trump inherited an economy where a majority of Americans were left worse off then they were four years prior.
 

Small businesses are being crushed by Trump’s tariffs and economists say it’s a warning for the economy​

“Everybody believes that I’m a fighter, so I’m fighting it,” Varma told CNBC in an interview. “We’ve reduced some salaries. We had planned to hire some people we’re not going to hire anymore. … If things don’t look good, especially after increasing the prices, and we don’t get the sales, then obviously we may lay off some people, as well.”

AV Universal is just one of the many small businesses that are buckling under Trump’s global trade war, struggling to pay the sudden increase in duties and forecast what’s ahead as policy evolves. Businesses of all sizes have raised prices and negotiated with vendors to weather the tariff storm and many larger retailers have so far proven resilient, with minimal impact to their profitability and future growth outlooks. Better-than-expected quarterly reports have led investors to largely shrug off the tariff threat, as the S&P 500 hovers near record highs.

But the higher costs have hit smaller companies harder because they have fewer levers to pull than their larger competitors. Their margins are slimmer, their supply chains less diverse and their negotiating power with vendors dampened by the smaller sizes of their orders.

Small businesses owners interviewed by CNBC said they largely expect to be able to manage higher costs from tariffs by raising prices, but only if it doesn’t cause shoppers to buy less — which most are already starting to see.

U.S. consumers bearing more than half the cost of tariffs so far, Goldman Sachs says​


Dotard is ruining the good economy he inherited.
/——/ From the gang who pushed high minimum wages, COVID shutdown and endless government paperwork now worry about small businesses.
Funny stuff
 
/——/ From the gang who pushed high minimum wages, COVID shutdown and endless government paperwork now worry about small businesses.
Funny stuff
No kidding. Every democrat policy hurts small businesses so that their billionaire buddies can take over that business sector.

These assholes don't care about small businesses other than how to get rid of them easier.
 
15th post
/——/ From the gang who pushed high minimum wages, COVID shutdown and endless government paperwork now worry about small businesses.
Funny stuff
trump shut down the economy over COVID.

Stocks fell on Wednesday as new trade developments out of Washington exacerbated concerns among investors about U.S.-China relations. The latest batch of corporate earnings from names like Texas Instruments and Netflix also weighed on the major averages.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average traded lower by 362 points, or 0.8%. The S&P 500 fell 1%, while the Nasdaq Composite shed 1.6%.

Stocks took a leg lower Wednesday after Reuters, citing a U.S. official and three people briefed by U.S. authorities, reported that the White House is weighing placing curbs on exports to China that are made with U.S. software. To be sure, the sources said that the plan is not the only option being considered, and it might not move forward.


Over and over and over Dotard roils the markets due to his tariff idiocy.
 
trump shut down the economy over COVID.

Stocks fell on Wednesday as new trade developments out of Washington exacerbated concerns among investors about U.S.-China relations. The latest batch of corporate earnings from names like Texas Instruments and Netflix also weighed on the major averages.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average traded lower by 362 points, or 0.8%. The S&P 500 fell 1%, while the Nasdaq Composite shed 1.6%.

Stocks took a leg lower Wednesday after Reuters, citing a U.S. official and three people briefed by U.S. authorities, reported that the White House is weighing placing curbs on exports to China that are made with U.S. software. To be sure, the sources said that the plan is not the only option being considered, and it might not move forward.


Over and over and over Dotard roils the markets due to his tariff idiocy.
/----/ "trump shut down the economy over COVID."
I'm stopping you at your first misleading statement. True, Trump did call for closing the economy, and he wanted to reopen by Easter. But Blue State governors said no. It was their decision. They dragged it on and even made it more draconian. Red states had less closure, and even two states had no shutdown.
Feel free to post facts proving me wrong.
 
I'm not talking about food either. I'm talking about the new Wall Street phrase. TACO = Trump Always Chickens Out. Thisis what Wall Street now uses to define Trump's threats of tariffs because he always backs off, just like he did this week with the EU.

What is the ‘TACO trade’ on Wall Street?​

There’s a new trade on Wall Street: the TACO trade, standing for “Trump Always Chickens Out.”

The term was coined by Robert Armstrong, a writer for the Financial Times, and is intended to capture how markets have fallen on Trump’s vow to impose steep tariffs on imports to the United States and then jump back up when Trump announces pauses on those tariffs.

Your thread has aged very well:
 
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