United States

Trump imposes new tariffs while keeping door open to talks

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

The return of Donald Trump’s trade tariffs in 2025 has triggered headlines, market unease, and another round of speculation over what this means for global business. The former president insists that these new measures—targeting imports from China, Mexico, and Europe—are not a signal of closed-door protectionism, but part of a larger plan to “negotiate better deals.”

But here's the real tension: there’s no clear deal on the table. No sequencing. No structure. Just a revived tactic without a revised strategy. This time, business leaders aren’t reacting with urgency. They’re responding with caution. Tariffs in 2018 reshaped global supply chains. Tariffs in 2025 are being read as signals of domestic instability, not economic intent.

Back in 2018, Trump's trade war was a disruptive—and at times effective—tool to extract concessions or stall competitive threats. But the global trade landscape has since changed.

Supply chain localization is now baked into the strategy decks of major manufacturers. Nearshoring is already underway, with US firms expanding in Mexico and Vietnam. The pandemic and geopolitical shifts—especially US-China tech decoupling—have made many companies less reliant on predictable US trade policy. So when Trump reinstates broad-based tariffs but says he’s still “open to negotiating,” it lands differently. The message isn’t taken as leverage—it’s taken as improvisation.

To understand why these tariffs lack force, it’s worth examining what’s missing. In trade negotiations, leverage isn’t just about applying pressure—it’s about sequencing incentives. Effective trade diplomacy is built around timelines, thresholds, and linked concessions: “Here’s the tariff. Here’s what we want in return. Here’s when it lifts.” Trump’s approach skips those steps. There is no transparent framework. Just a unilateral imposition of cost.

This creates two problems. First, partners like the EU and Mexico don’t know what terms would lead to de-escalation. Second, US businesses operating internationally have no clarity on whether to plan for temporary disruption or long-term divergence. In short, the tariffs feel more like campaign rhetoric than credible policy design. And international firms are treating them as such.

Outside the US, the response has been sharper—because it’s less politicized. European officials are already dusting off retaliatory measures and accelerating internal resilience plans, including industrial subsidies and sustainability-linked trade policies.

In the Gulf, trade ministries and sovereign funds are positioning themselves as neutral corridors. For example, Saudi Arabia and the UAE are actively marketing their ports and logistics hubs as buffers against US-China volatility. They’re not waiting for Washington to define its terms—they’re offering alternatives to those terms.

In Southeast Asia, where Vietnam and Malaysia have benefitted from past US-China friction, the response is more opportunistic. The assumption isn’t that the US will follow through on coherent trade reform—but that American unpredictability will keep driving investment into the region.

Trump has always relied on bold, declarative moves to shape perception. Tariffs serve that purpose well. They’re visible. They look like action. They poll well among protectionist-leaning voter blocs. But in strategic terms, optics without operational alignment can backfire. These tariffs may harden global perceptions of the US as an erratic negotiator. Worse, they may accelerate the very trends Trump wants to reverse: the diversification of global trade away from US-centric rules.

If the US wants to remain the anchor of global supply chains, it can’t afford to be seen as structurally unreliable. Tariffs without a plan only reinforce that perception.

For CEOs, trade heads, and investment strategists, the message is increasingly clear: build for volatility, not certainty. The 2025 tariff wave is not about sector protection or reshoring incentives—it’s about strategic improvisation wrapped in the language of economic nationalism.

That makes long-term planning harder. But it also clarifies the real task: de-risk exposure to US policy swings. Whether that means deeper investment in EU and ASEAN markets, or reorganizing sourcing structures to bypass high-tariff corridors, the imperative is the same—don’t wait for Washington to stabilize. This sentiment is becoming the default stance in boardrooms from Frankfurt to Dubai to Singapore.

There was a window in which Trump—or any US leader—could have used tariffs as part of a broader trade reinvention. Tied to climate, digital standards, or industrial policy, tariffs could be a bridge to a new multilateral framework. But that would require coherence, consistency, and strategic intent. Instead, the 2025 rollout looks like political theatre. And the business world is treating it accordingly—not as a call to engage, but as a signal to hedge.

Trump says he can still negotiate. But without a clear path to resolution or a defined counterpart at the table, these new tariffs aren’t negotiation tactics. They’re volatility generators. And for global businesses already adapting to a fractured trade environment, the message isn’t to prepare for a deal. It’s to prepare for disorder.

Tariffs may be the tool. But ambiguity is the policy.


Economy Europe
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 9, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

France Marseille wildfire forces airport closure and mass evacuations

While summer tourism picks up across Europe, France’s second-largest city is facing a very different disruption: a raging wildfire that’s scorched 700 hectares...

Economy Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 9, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Singapore stocks steady as STI gains 0.4% despite fresh wave of US tariffs

Singapore may have dodged the latest round of US tariffs, but the message to its ASEAN neighbors is unambiguous: differentiation is back on...

Economy World
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 9, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Hong Kong stocks drop on China deflation fears

The latest slide in Hong Kong’s equity markets is not just a passing correction. It signals growing discomfort with the durability of China’s...

Economy Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 9, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Malaysia’s market holds steady despite 25% Trump tariff blow

While a 25% US tariff hike on Malaysian goods could have rattled confidence, the actual market reaction was surprisingly measured. The FBM KLCI...

Economy World
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 9, 2025 at 10:30:00 AM

China continues to face subdued price growth in June

June’s inflation data offered little surprise—and even less reassurance. China’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose just 0.2% year-on-year, while the Producer Price Index...

Economy United States
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 9, 2025 at 9:30:00 AM

Wall Street dips amid uncertainty over trade policy

There is a strategic dissonance playing out in real time. On the one hand, Wall Street remains tethered to growth optimism and earnings...

Economy World
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 9, 2025 at 9:30:00 AM

Oil price volatility reflects rising geopolitical and trade risk

Crude benchmarks climbed to two-week highs this week—but beneath the price action lies a web of geopolitical and structural risks that are quietly...

Economy Singapore
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 8, 2025 at 12:30:00 PM

Singapore-Malaysia airline joint venture approval

In granting conditional approval to the proposed joint venture between Singapore Airlines (SIA) and Malaysia Airlines, the Competition and Consumer Commission of Singapore...

Economy Europe
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 8, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

EU seeks tariff deal with Trump ahead of July deadline following ‘positive exchange’

It looks like another flashpoint in the global trade narrative: the EU scrambling to reach a deal with the US before tariffs double,...

Economy Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 8, 2025 at 11:30:00 AM

Trump’s tariff warning to Asia: Big hikes and a deal deadline by Aug 1

While American attention remains fixated on the domestic political theater, the July 7 tariff ultimatum from the White House to its Asian trade...

Economy World
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyJuly 8, 2025 at 11:00:00 AM

Hong Kong stocks rise after three-day drop on hopes of better US trade deals

When Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index edged up 0.3% on Tuesday morning and tech stocks led the rebound, most observers chalked it up...

Load More