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Moneycontrol Pro Panorama | The things that keep us honest

In February 21 edition of Moneycontrol Pro Panorama: Trump risks making the same mistakes as Biden, all eyes on market valuations, state borrowings could lead to a collapse, this defence PSU stock is a great buy, and more

February 21, 2025 / 14:41 IST
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The global exchange rate market is a great leveller and disciplinarian when it comes to external sector of countries.

Dear Reader,

The Panorama newsletter is sent to Moneycontrol Pro subscribers on market days. It offers easy access to stories published on Moneycontrol Pro and gives a little extra by setting out a context or an event or trend that investors should keep track of. Markets and policymakers are supposed to keep each other honest and most times they do. If markets step into unwarranted and uncharted territory, policymakers swoop in to discipline them. When policymakers tend to act with a high hand, markets remind them of the boundaries of their power. Sometimes, markets also kick policymakers out of their jobs. Recall UK prime minister Liz Truss’s tumultuous period when she cut taxes that jeopardised British fiscal policy and how the bond market reminded her with surging yields that it cannot be done. Truss bowed out rather unceremoniously from office.

But what happens when one befuddles the other remarkably?

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US President Donald Trump’s executive orders and tariffs have left investors wondering which way the economy would go and therefore, what the response from the central bank would be. Globally, foreign exchange, bond and equity markets are having a tough time figuring out the impact.

The US bond market has already grasped the straws of certainties such as tariffs will increase inflation in the US and elsewhere. But the impact of tariffs on US economic growth is unclear and it is difficult to question the resilience of the US economy. History has punished those who have bet against the US. An article in the Financial Times titled ‘Will the bond market rein in Trump? captures the confusion among bond investors. The US bond market is at sea whether to worry about inflation or recession.