Businesses across America are sounding the alarm on tariffs

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It’s about tariffs.

Markets on Thursday had another wild swing, falling as much as 3% before recovering most of the day’s losses with tech stocks actually closing in positive figures. This volatility followed the nearly 800-point decline in the Dow and the more than 3% drop in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq on Tuesday.

And while all the major worries for investors — higher rates, slowing earnings growth, recession risks, and the trade war — remain in play, this week’s action should make clear that right now, markets and businesses are most sensitive to what’s happening with trade.

On Wednesday, the Fed released its latest Beige Book report, a collection of economic anecdotes from each of the Fed’s 12 districts that helps form the basis of the economic discussion that will take place at the Fed’s next policy meeting, set begin on December 18.

“Most Districts reported that firms remained positive,” the report said, “however, optimism has waned in some as contacts cited increased uncertainty from impacts of tariffs, rising interest rates, and labor market constraints… Reports of tariff-induced cost increases have spread more broadly from manufacturers and contractors to retailers and restaurants.”

Throughout the country, business leaders in a variety of industries cited tariffs as pressuring costs and tamping down their overall economic outlook. The report also suggests that tariffs and labor shortages are likely to be drivers of inflation in the months ahead, a dynamic that isn’t likely to prompt the Fed to back off its interest rate forecast.

And for any investors still not convinced that the biggest worry for markets right now is tariffs, the Beige Book should put any lingering skepticism to rest.

US President Donald Trump (R) and China’s President Xi Jinping (L) along with members of their delegations, hold a dinner meeting at the end of the G20 Leaders’ Summit in Buenos Aires, on December 01, 2018. (SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Image)
US President Donald Trump (R) and China’s President Xi Jinping (L) along with members of their delegations, hold a dinner meeting at the end of the G20 Leaders’ Summit in Buenos Aires, on December 01, 2018. (SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Image)

The Cleveland Fed noted that, “Contacts noted that tariffs were lifting prices further down the supply chain.” Out of the Richmond Fed, “Manufacturing and services firms saw a sharp in-crease in input prices, which were attributed to tariffs, shipping costs, and some higher business-to-business and recruitment costs.”

Price pressures eased but remained elevated in part due to the tariffs, and outlooks were less optimistic than the previous report,” according to the Dallas Fed. And in the Philadelphia Fed’s district, “Tariffs remained a major concern for many producers.”

The Institute for Supply Management’s latest reading on activity in the services sector also showed concerns about tariffs, with an executives in the public administration sector saying, “The imposition of and threats to impose tariffs are having a negative effect on several capital-improvement projects in progress… The increases are not expected or budgeted for.”