The 'trade war' talk is a sideshow: America’s high strategy stakes are elsewhere
  • Economic fundamentals and "trade war" chatter are very different things.

  • The Fed's moves to anchor inflation expectations will clash with Treasury's huge financing needs.

  • Trade disputes are minor issues in the challenges to America's world order.

Wall Street has used the "trade war" panic to reprice assets in an accelerating economy facing Federal Reserve announcements of "gradual" interest rate increases and the U.S. Treasury's soaring deficit financing needs.

A huge buildup of cash positions over the last few months had to be used to acquire the frothy assets at a "right" price. A process euphemistically known as a "market correction" will continue, using trade and other media-hyped issues as proximate causes for further risk-adjusted valuations driven by changing economic fundamentals.

America's $640.8 billion problem with the European Union (mainly Germany ) and East Asia (mainly China ) should be an easy win.

That scandalously large and intolerable trade deficit in 2017 is now running at an annual rate of $630.6 billion, based on numbers for the first two months of this year. Over that period, U.S. exports to the EU increased 8.8 percent, but exports to China declined — there was virtually no improvement for American sales to East Asia as a whole.

Washington lawyers negotiating trade problems need no coaching to understand that the Europeans and East Asians have got themselves into a position where they must yield. Surely, it would help to remind these systematic trade surplus runners that they failed to observe the rules of international trade adjustment enshrined in the founding charter of the International Monetary Fund.

Treat Europe with care

Reasons behind the U.S. administration suddenly waking up to its trillion dollar foreign debts are irrelevant to the ongoing trade argument. But that can underscore the urgency of stopping America's huge losses of wealth and intellectual property in a system that violates the long-established rules of orderly and balanced world trade.

Now, Washington D.C. has nothing to gain by feeding the frenzy of a courtroom drama pitting tough-talking American lawyers against furious Europeans and East Asians staring at large political and economic losses from their withering trade windfalls.

The White House has amply made its case. It's time to calm things down by explaining to the world the decades-old damage — in terms of dollars, job losses and intellectual property thefts — suffered by the American economy.

It is important to do that because the Europeans and East Asians are pushing back by raising the decibels of "trade war" histrionics with improper accusations that America is destroying the world trading system.