
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On Saturday, the White House announced the imposition of heavy tariffs on goods exported from Mexico, Canada and China and all three nations announced their intention to retaliate. These tariffs threaten to raise prices and slow economic activity across all four countries. While the end game of this trade war remains very uncertain, it has the potential to impact bonds, stocks and exchange rates. For investors, regardless of the early market reaction, the reality of a trade war suggest the need for broad diversification including allocations to real assets and international assets.
By Dr. David Kelly4.4
186186 ratings
On Saturday, the White House announced the imposition of heavy tariffs on goods exported from Mexico, Canada and China and all three nations announced their intention to retaliate. These tariffs threaten to raise prices and slow economic activity across all four countries. While the end game of this trade war remains very uncertain, it has the potential to impact bonds, stocks and exchange rates. For investors, regardless of the early market reaction, the reality of a trade war suggest the need for broad diversification including allocations to real assets and international assets.

523 Listeners

973 Listeners

1,177 Listeners

94 Listeners

278 Listeners

1,040 Listeners

291 Listeners

182 Listeners

61 Listeners

1,304 Listeners

77 Listeners

208 Listeners

29 Listeners

74 Listeners

24 Listeners