Passer au contenu principal
« Paris (French) accueil »« News accueil »
Story

'This is a roller coaster ride': How Trump's tariffs turned the 'TACO' trade into Wall Street's biggest debate

Alexandra Canal

Updated 4 min read

In This Article:

It was another week of policy pivots, back-and-forth trade headlines, and economic data that did little to anchor investor expectations. In the midst of the chaos, one phrase kept surfacing across Wall Street: the "TACO" trade.

An acronym for "Trump Always Chickens Out," it captures a growing belief among investors that the president talks tough on tariffs but rarely follows through. That assumption has fueled a market tailwind in recent months as traders bet on policy pivots, buoyed by an initial US-China tariff deescalation earlier this month.

But that narrative hit turbulence last week when Trump lashed out at China in a post on Truth Social, accusing the country of having "violated" its trade deal with the US. While he did not provide specifics, the comments echoed earlier rhetoric from his administration suggesting that negotiations with Beijing had "stalled."

Meanwhile, Bloomberg reported that the Trump administration plans to expand tech restrictions on China by targeting subsidiaries of already-sanctioned firms, aiming to close loopholes that allow Beijing to circumvent existing curbs. The news sent stocks sharply lower on Friday.

On Monday, China hit back with its own accusation that the US had broken the tariff truce. It vowed to take "resolute and forceful" measures to defend its interests, even as Trump voiced hopes for a call with President Xi Jinping this week.

Still, despite the headlines, markets had largely been leaning into the idea that Trump's tough talk rarely translates into tough action. It's a bet that's paid off: Stocks have not only erased their "Liberation Day" losses, but the S&P 500 (^GSPC) secured its best May since 1990 and had the best month since Nov. 2023.

But while some on Wall Street still lean into that pattern, others are warning that the trade's logic may have run its course.

"We told Donald Trump that we have this 'TACO' trade," Julie Beale, chief market strategist at Kayne Anderson Rudnick, told Yahoo Finance on Thursday, referencing a reporter's question to Trump earlier in the week about the trade. In response, Trump slammed the term, defending his trade stance and brushing off the question as "nasty."

"I worry [that] actually makes him bear down a little bit more and decide to be more resilient and more gripping on some of these tariff trades," Beale said. "So I have a little bit of a concern that creates actually more uncertainty."

For the most part, this uncertainty has worked in many investors' favor, especially retail traders who have jumped in to "buy the dip" in record numbers, capitalizing on the familiar pattern of policy threats followed by swift deescalation.