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Trump to launch trade investigation, another tariff war on the way?
NANHUA FUTURES
joined discussion · Jan 22 15:54

Macroeconomic Analysis: TACO Impact

[Market Information]
1) Greenland Situation
①Trump announced a cooperation framework with NATO regarding Greenland, retracting tariff threats against eight European countries and confirming no military seizure of the island. ②Precious metals plummeted following Trump’s announcement on Greenland, while US stocks, bonds, and the dollar strengthened. ③Sweden's largest pension fund has sold off the majority of its holdings in US Treasuries, with this sale amounting to approximately $7.7 to $8.8 billion. ④The European Parliament announced an indefinite freeze on the review of the EU-US trade agreement. ⑤Potential Greenland deal revealed: Small land concessions for US military base construction.
2) The central bank held the 2026 Payment and Settlement Work Conference, calling for the acceleration of building a cross-border RMB payment system, promoting interconnectivity in cross-border payments, and driving the diversified and multi-level development of the cross-border payment system. Implement strict穿透式regulation of payment institutions and functional regulation of payment businesses.
[Core Analysis and Transmission Logic]
The current macro environment exhibits core characteristics of a global geopolitical reshuffle alongside domestic structural divergence, with precise policy-driven stabilization efforts underway. The old global system led by the United States is accelerating toward a 'fractured' end, with multilateral order dysfunction and intensified major power competition becoming the norm. The dispute over Greenland has escalated tensions between the US and Europe, with the US imposing tariff threats on eight European countries. The EU responded with retaliatory lists and freezing trade agreements, highlighting a significant transatlantic trust rift. Sweden and Denmark's pension funds have begun divesting from US Treasuries, undermining their traditional safe-haven status, leading global financial markets into a risk-averse phase, with Japan’s market also affected. Against this backdrop, the Bank of Japan’s policy direction is under close scrutiny. It is expected to maintain existing interest rates at its latest meeting, continuing a hawkish tone, with Governor Ueda likely explaining that this move aims to assess the market impact of last year’s rate hike. Meanwhile, Iran remains a 'geopolitical black swan,' exacerbating regional uncertainty as middle powers adopt 'variable geometry' cooperation models, focusing on strengthening domestic capabilities to hedge risks.
Domestically, China’s economic performance in 2025 reflects a 'strong supply, stable external demand, weak domestic demand' divergence. High-end manufacturing and green transformation lead on the supply side, supported by the implementation of the China-US agreement and advantages in new momentum industrial chains driving export growth. Weak domestic demand remains a core challenge. As the first year of the '15th Five-Year Plan' in 2026, GDP growth is projected at 4.5%-5%, with boosting domestic demand seen as central to stabilizing growth. Recently, monetary and fiscal policies have shown efficient coordination, with targeted structural tools addressing key sectors. Marginal improvements are already visible in infrastructure and real estate starts.
Overall, geopolitics has rewritten the logic of global asset pricing, with risk aversion and diversified allocation dominating capital flows over the long term. US dollar assets remain pressured by America’s structural challenges, while middle powers’ united self-strengthening emerges as a crucial hedging path. China’s economy continues to play a 'stabilizing anchor' role, with strong supply-side competitiveness and resilient external demand providing foundational support. Precise policy synergy is tackling domestic demand shortfalls and may effectively hedge against external uncertainties, laying a solid foundation for the start of the '15th Five-Year Plan.'
Author: Zhou Ji, Senior Director of South China Research Institute Z0017101
Important Disclaimer: The content and opinions in this article are for educational and reference purposes only and do not constitute any investment advice. The market carries risks, and investments should be made with caution.
[Market Information] 1) Greenland Situation ①Trump announced a cooperation framework with NATO regarding Greenland, retracting tariff threats against eight European countries and confirming no military seizure of the island. ②Precious metals plummeted following Trump’s announcement on Greenland, while US stocks, bonds, and the dollar strengthened. ③Sweden's largest pension fund has sold off the majority of its holdings in US Treasuries, with this sale amounting to approximately $7.7 to $8.8 billion. ④The European Parliament announced an indefinite freeze on the review of the EU-US trade agreement. ⑤Potential Greenland deal revealed: Small land concessions for US military base construction. 2) The central bank held the 2026 Payment and Settlement Work Conference, calling for the acceleration of building a cross-border RMB payment system, promoting interconnectivity in cross-border payments, and driving the diversified and multi-level development of the cross-border payment system. Implement strict穿透式regulation of payment institutions and functional regulation of payment businesses. [Core Analysis and Transmission Logic] The current macro environment features a dual characteristic of global geopolitical turbulence reshaping order alongside domestic structural divergence and targeted policy-driven stable growth. The old global system dominated by the US is accelerating towards a 'fractured' end, with multilateral order failures and intensified great power competition becoming the norm. Escalating tensions between the US and Europe over the Greenland dispute have led to the US imposing tariff threats on eight European countries, to which the EU responded with retaliatory lists and freezing trade agreement reviews, highlighting cracks in transatlantic trust. Sweden and Denmark’s pension funds were the first to liquidate their holdings of US Treasuries, impacting the traditional safe-haven status of US debt, ushering global financial markets into a risk-averse phase where even Japan's market could not remain insulated. Against this backdrop, the direction of Japan's central bank policies has drawn significant attention...
Risk Disclaimer: The above content only represents the author's view. It does not represent any position or investment advice of Futu. Futu makes no representation or warranty.Read more
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