That was the sound of the dead cat bounce
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A version of this story appeared in CNN Businessā Nightcap newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for freehere. There are two conflicting messages coming from the White House in recent days: On Monday morning, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro penned an op-ed in theFinancial Timessaying that you shouldnāt hold your breath for any exemptions or deals. One chaotic trading day later, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent went on CNBC and said, āI think we can end up with some good dealsā if countries come to the table with āsolid proposals.ā (Bessent isnāt the only Trump advisor butting heads with Navarro. Elon Musk on Tuesday tweeted that āNavarro is truly a moron,ā because apparently we live in a country run by the Real Housewives of the West Wing.) Anyway, the White Houseāsapparentopenness tosometariff flexibility was enough to shift the mood ā for a while, anyway ā on Wall Street, which, after three straight trading days of losses, was ready to go bargain shopping. Stocks opened more than 3% higher Tuesday morning. Of course, itās important to remember that volatility in the market goes both directions. Stocks often briefly rebound in moments of great uncertainty. Itās called, in the colorful parlance of the investing world, a dead cat bounce. (The idea is even a dead cat will bounce if it falls fast enough from a great enough height. Itās also known as a suckerās rally, because itās usually not based on anything substantive.) Sure enough, the cat bounced. Then, to add to the animal metaphors, the bears roared back. The morning rally got completely wiped out by late afternoon as investors were slapped in the face with news that the White House would tack on an extra 50% tariff on China. For those keeping track at home, thatās 104% in new tariffs on China under Trumpās second term. (And with apologies for all the math: When you addthatto the USās existing tariffs on China, the total average tariff US imports from the worldās second-largest economy will come to nearly 125%. Considering how much stuff Americans buy from China, Wall Street was right in freaking out.) The exorbitant China tariffs are only compounding concerns about a shock to supply chains that could push the US (and possibly the world) into arecession. That anxiety isnāt helped by the fact that businesses and investors donāt know which of the various adviser opinions Trump will ultimately listen to. Hereās a smorgasbord of mixed messages from Trump aides in just the last day: And hereās what Trump said when asked about the mixed messaging Monday: āIt could be, they can both be true. There can be permanent tariffs, and there can also be negotiations because there are things that we need beyond tariffs.ā If youāre a business owner or a banker, thatās the clear-as-mud guidance youāre living by right now. Bottom line:Corporate America seems to be praying that Bessent (a former hedge fund manager) and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick (former head of financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald) will be the voices of reason that prevent Trump from tanking the economy or sparking a financial panic. Heās the dealmaker president, after all ā surely heāll eventually tie a tourniquet around this self-inflicted wound. Buuuuutthereās a pretty convincing counter-argument to that, too. AsThe AtlanticāsJonathan Lemire wroteMonday, rather ominously, Trump is a president emboldened by his comeback and unburdened by a reelection campaign. āHe believes that launching a trade battle is his best chance of fundamentally remaking the American economy, elites and experts be damned,ā Lemire wrote. āāThis man was politically dead and survived both four criminal cases and an assassination attempt to be president again. He really believes in this and is going to go big,ā one of the outside allies told (Lemire). āHis pain threshold is high to get this done.āā