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The TACO trade is still the market’s expectations,” said Ed Mills, Washington policy analyst at Raymond James. Yet there could be a flaw in Wall Street’s TACO trade logic.
The president wants tariffs, the higher the better. Whether that is achieved unilaterally or via deals is secondary.
The dearth of U.S. trade deals to date has fed the narrative that “Trump Always Chickens Out,” the so-called TACO trade, that ...
So as the Wednesday deadline approached, Wall Street was expecting Trump to announce an extension to the tariff pause by Tuesday, reviving the so-called TACO trade that alludes to his history of ...
S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, Amazon.com Inc, NVIDIA Corporation. Read 's Market Analysis on Investing.com ...
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Greed and Fear Report: ‘TACO’ Trade in trouble? Jefferies’ Chris Wood warns of looming macro risks
Christopher Wood of Jefferies warns that the belief in the TACO trade's safety is waning as tariff threats could have ...
See: The 'Trump always chickens out' trade is the talk of Wall Street. Here's one way to play it. But now that things have calmed down, could the "TACO" trade return, but this time, in reverse?
President Donald Trump is threatening to revive his trade war. Wall Street isn’t too concerned. Global markets were relatively calm Tuesday after Trump on Monday ratcheted up his tariff campaign — but ...
As Wall Street traders continued to share the accusation that “Trump Always Chickens Out,” the president falsely insisted that he did not delay a tariff deadline.
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