HomeNewsBusinessMoneycontrol ResearchRisk premium inflates as Trump trade war rages

Risk premium inflates as Trump trade war rages

Even if one expects Trump to succeed, prolonging of political manoeuvres, could make the global supply chain more susceptible to disruption

July 23, 2018 / 13:03 IST
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U.S. President Donald Trump arrives shakes hands with Jerome Powell, his nominee to become chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve at the White House in Washington, U.S., November 2, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria - HP1EDB21HQF0Y
U.S. President Donald Trump arrives shakes hands with Jerome Powell, his nominee to become chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve at the White House in Washington, U.S., November 2, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria - HP1EDB21HQF0Y

Anubhav Sahu Moneycontrol Research

In the midst of global corporate earnings, International Monetary Fund’s update on global economic health and Federal Reserve’s reassertion on interest rate trajectory, trade war risks is suddenly taking centre stage. While the Fed’s interest rate path remains firm with two more rate hikes pencilled in this year, risks emerging from the US President Donald Trump’s brinkmanship cannot be wished away and can potentially derail the economic goldilocks of high growth and low inflation. While we assign low probability for a full blown trade war, impact on growth and capital inflows due to the length of uncertainty caused by the trade tariff tensions implies higher equity risk premium.

Yet another strong affirmation on growth
The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book report, which is published eight times a year, provides continuum of qualitative assessment of economic conditions in the US. The key message from the July report provides sustenance of positive economic momentum with the majority of Federal Reserve districts expressing moderate growth. The key outlier in the last few reports has been the Dallas District (Texas), which reported strong growth, driven by the energy sector.

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On the growth front, the above anecdotal observations were backed by similar but data driven assertion from Fed Chair Jerome Powell. In its semi-annual monetary policy report to the Congress, he submitted that robust labour market, higher after-tax incomes and rising consumer confidence have led to firming up of the domestic economic scenario. Additionally, business investment have grown at a robust rate. Part of this is also reflected in consensus expectation of 4 percent year-on-year (YoY) growth in US GDP in Q2 CY18. The macroeconomic backdrop outside the US has also been supportive of US exports and manufacturing growth.

Inflation and labour shortage concerns at the periphery
In its May Beige book report, the Fed highlighted that input cost increases, labour shortages in some sectors and improving demand have led to higher prices in transportation, construction and manufacturing sectors. In the current report, higher tariffs have emerged as a new factor contributing to price increases for key inputs like fuel, construction materials, freight and metals.

Galloping metal price inflation Source: US Bureau of Labour statistics