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Morning Bid: Trepidation Day
FILE PHOTO: Cargo ships at the port of Oakland, California · Reuters

By Mike Dolan

LONDON (Reuters) - What matters in U.S. and global markets today

By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Financial Industry and Financial Markets

If you thought a global trade war was already priced into world markets, Thursday's reaction to the U.S. tariff sweep will be sobering.

I'll get into all the details below and explain why this is just the beginning of what could be a very difficult ride.

Today's Market Minute

* President Donald Trump's move to impose sweeping tariffs on U.S. imports from allies and rivals alike sparked threats of retaliation on Thursday.

* Markets are reeling after the new tariffs sent shockwaves through the financial world, with the dollar and U.S. stocks among the hardest hit on fears that a broadening trade war will unleash a recession.

* "All this work for nothing." Trump's global tariffs are creating an all-round blockade that is hurting Chinese businesses, large and small.

* This latest round of tariffs will sap yet more vigor from a world economy that has barely recovered from the post-pandemic inflation surge and is weighed down by record-high debt and unnerved by geopolitical strife.

* He calls it "Liberation Day", but Trump's gamble on global tariffs could cause political headwinds for his party and economic pain for his constituents if his promises to recast the economy do not work out.

Trepidation Day

Some thought Wall Street would embrace the much-hoped for clarity offered by Trump's tariff announcement, but they were wrong. Wall Street stock futures have plummeted more than 3% overnight on the combination of a 10% universal tariff on all U.S. imports and reciprocal tariffs on top of that for many countries, heavily concentrated in China and Asia. China now faces a combined 54% tariff rate when factoring in earlier moves.

European Union imports are set to be hit with 20% tariffs, with 24% planned for Japan and 10% for Britain. Canada and Mexico are not currently subject to reciprocal tariffs because Trump's prior 25% fentanyl and immigration-related tariffs will stay in place.

The moves appear to have been decided using relatively crude calculations of goods trade deficits with the United States, something that rankled many investors given the amount of time taken to construct the plan.

Countries affected around the world said they would now examine retaliatory measures, with the EU proposing its own tariffs. There are also reports suggesting the bloc is considering additional fiscal supports for the worst-affected sectors.

Overall, Deutsche Bank estimates the average tariff rate on U.S. imports could now rise to 25-30% - the highest in more than 100 years and above most expectations.