Tag Archives: Trump tariffs

Supreme Court silence on Trump tariffs extends market risk: deVere CEO

The US Supreme Court’s decision not to rule on the legality of Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs keeps a major source of market uncertainty alive, warns the CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory organizations.

The warning from deVere Group’s Nigel Green comes as the court released three opinions Wednesday but offered no judgment on the tariff regime, leaving investors without legal clarity on a policy that has reshaped supply chains and pricing.

“With no indication of when the justices will address the issue, markets are now forced to price an open-ended legal risk around a major US trade policy.

“This is uncertainty being extended, not resolved,” says the CEO. 

“Tariffs affect prices, margins and investment decisions.

“The legal challenge to the tariffs goes to the heart of presidential authority over trade. 

“A clear decision would’ve given companies and investors a basis for planning. 

“Instead, businesses continue to operate under rules that could ultimately be upheld, rewritten or struck down, but with no timeline for resolution.

Nigel Green says this legal limbo has immediate implications for market behavior. 

“When the legal status of a policy that affects trillions of dollars in global commerce remains unresolved, risk premiums rise across equities, currencies and credit.”

For multinational companies, the impact is already being felt in boardrooms. Decisions on sourcing, pricing and capital investment remain provisional. 

Firms hesitate to commit long-term resources when the legal foundation of trade policy could shift suddenly.

“Tariffs already distort supply chains and cost structures,” he notes. 

“Add legal uncertainty and you magnify the effect. Investment slows, confidence weakens and growth expectations come under pressure.”

Inflation remains central to the debate. Companies facing unpredictable future costs tend to build buffers into pricing strategies. Those buffers often land on consumers. The longer tariffs stay in legal doubt, the more likely firms are to maintain higher price assumptions across a wide range of goods.

The deVere chief executive says this feeds straight into the macro outlook. 

“Unresolved trade policy pushes uncertainty into inflation forecasts,” he says. “This shapes expectations for interest rates, bond yields and equity valuations. This becomes a market-wide issue.”

Sectors most exposed to global trade are on the front line. Manufacturing, autos, technology hardware and retail all face heightened sensitivity to tariff outcomes. Without judicial clarity, investors must model a wider range of scenarios, increasing volatility and widening valuation gaps between winners and losers.

“Markets hate open-ended risk,” Nigel Green says. “When something this big stays undecided, traders and portfolio managers price for instability.”

The political dimension sharpens the impact. Tariffs remain a cornerstone of President Trump’s economic strategy. 

With the court silent, the policy stays in force but legally unresolved, leaving investors uncertain about durability and direction.

“Tariffs remain, the legal question remains, and markets price the gap,” he says. “And when markets price uncertainty, volatility typically follows.”

With no timetable for a ruling, attention now turns to every signal from Washington, from court calendars to policy messaging, for clues on when the tariff question will finally be settled. 

“The unresolved status of Trump’s tariff regime remains a defining risk factor for global markets,” concludes the deVere CEO.

Trump tariffs face court blow, but investors need to focus on fundamentals

September 1 2025 Legal wrangling over Donald Trump’s flagship tariff strategy is a ‘distraction’ for investors, who should instead remain focused on the core drivers of wealth creation: strong corporate earnings and a resilient US economy.

This is the warning from the CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory organizations after a federal appeals court ruled that most of the President’s blanket 10% reciprocal tariffs overreach his emergency powers.

The tariffs remain in place until mid-October while a potential Supreme Court challenge looms, but the decision has already thrown uncertainty over the administration’s trade policy.

Nigel Green, CEO of deVere Group, says: “This ruling highlights a serious legal threat to one of the President’s most high-profile economic policies.

“But investors should not let themselves get distracted by courtroom drama. What ultimately matters for markets are the fundamentals, and those remain solid.”

He continues: “Even if the tariffs are struck down, we believe the Trump administration will look for new ways to tax imports or otherwise raise revenue from companies selling into the US.

“It would be naïve to assume this White House will simply abandon such a significant fiscal lever. Investors must factor in that some form of levy is likely to remain in play.”

Despite the legal clouds, US corporate earnings have underscored their resilience.

The S&P 500 has reported year-on-year earnings growth of more than 9% in Q2 2025, with over three-quarters of companies beating Wall Street estimates.

Mega-cap tech firms continue to dominate: Apple’s most recent results showed net income climbing 17% to $28.4bn, while Microsoft delivered a 21% jump in cloud revenue. Amazon reported a 22% increase in quarterly earnings, powered by both its retail and cloud arms, while industrials such as Caterpillar posted double-digit revenue gains, citing strong global demand for infrastructure.

Even consumer-facing firms, often most exposed to trade frictions, are surprising on the upside—McDonald’s and Starbucks both beat consensus forecasts thanks to continued consumer spending.

The macro picture is equally supportive. US GDP expanded at an annualised rate of 2.8% in Q2, unemployment remains under 4%, and inflation has cooled to just above 2%, giving consumers more spending power.

Nigel Green says: “Corporate America continues to show that it can grow earnings and sustain profitability even under an unpredictable policy regime.

“These are the signals serious investors should be paying attention to—not short-term headlines about court rulings.”

Markets historically discount policy turbulence when earnings remain strong. Past tariff disputes, such as those over steel and aluminium, rattled sentiment temporarily but did not derail long-term equity performance.

The takeaway for investors is that profitability and economic momentum ultimately set market direction.

“The risk is that investors overreact to political headlines and miss the real story—businesses are making money, the economy is expanding, and valuations are underpinned by earnings power,” notes the deVere CEO.

“If you’re serious about building wealth, this is where your focus must remain.”

Nigel Green adds: “We urge investors not to get caught in the noise. Keep your eyes fixed on quality names with strong balance sheets, durable earnings streams, and global reach.”

While the courts weigh in on the legality of Trump’s tariff programme, deVere stresses that the administration is likely to find alternative routes to achieve its trade and revenue goals. But as long as corporate profitability holds up and the economy continues to grow, investors should avoid knee-jerk decisions.

“Markets will always have political and legal dramas. But wealth is built by those who can see beyond them to the real drivers of returns. Fundamentals must remain the compass,” concludes the deVere chief executive.

Court Blocks Most Trump Tariffs, Trump Grows Frustrated With Putin, CPAC Hungary

A federal court has blocked most of President Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs. The judges said the president overstepped his authority when he put tariffs on nearly every country in the world last month. Trump also appears increasingly frustrated with Russian leader Vladimir Putin over Moscow’s ongoing airstrikes in Ukraine. How could this affect any peace negotiations? And one of the largest right-wing political gatherings is getting underway in Eastern Europe.

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Today’s episode of Up First was edited by Kara Platoni, Miguel Macias, Arezou Rezvani, HJ Mai and Lisa Thomson. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Nia Dumas and Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Neisha Heinis, and our technical director is Carleigh Strange.

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Trump tariffs could stoke US inflation by 2.1%: deVere

US inflation could jump by 1.1% to 1.4% if Trump’s tariffs on Canada and Mexico take effect, and an additional 0.7% from the measures on China, forecasts global financial advisory giant, deVere Group.

The analysis comes as US President Donald Trump on Thursday said that his proposed 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada will go into effect March 4. 

He also said China will face an additional 10% tariff — on top of what the country already faces — on the same date. Reciprocal tariffs, which will apply to America’s global trade partners, will kick in April 2, Trump added. 

Meanwhile, Trump threatened to impose a 25% tariff on the European Union.

deVere Group CEO Nigel Green says: “We expect that inflation in the US will be stoked by between 1.1% and 1.4% from tariffs on Canada and Mexico, with another 0.7% coming from those slapped on China. 

“The economic implications are vast: the price of everyday goods will rise, corporate profits will feel the squeeze, and consumers will ultimately foot the bill.” 

He continues: “These tariffs place direct pressure on supply chains deeply integrated across North America. 

“Everything from cars to agricultural products will see cost surges, exacerbating inflationary pressures that had only recently shown signs of easing. 

“The impact won’t stop there—businesses facing higher input costs will either absorb the hit, reducing margins, or pass it on to consumers, reinforcing an inflation cycle that the Federal Reserve has been working to contain.”

The Chinese tariffs add another layer of complexity. An additional 10% tariff on Chinese goods compounds existing duties, making it increasingly expensive for American businesses reliant on Chinese manufacturing. 

“The end result? Heightened costs across industries, from technology to retail, further pushing inflation higher and forcing the Fed to reconsider its trajectory on interest rates. The central bank may need to maintain a more hawkish stance for longer than markets had anticipated, delaying the anticipated rate cuts that investors had been pricing in for 2025,” notes Nigel Green.

The US dollar’s reaction to these developments will be critical. Historically, trade tensions and inflationary fears have supported dollar strength, but the long-term trajectory depends on how aggressively the Fed reacts. 

“If inflation persists at elevated levels, it could erode real purchasing power, fueling market volatility and reshaping asset allocations globally.”

The deVere CEO goes on to add: “For equity markets, sectors that thrive in an inflationary environment—such as commodities, energy, and industrials—may present upside potential. 

“Companies with strong pricing power and exposure to domestic manufacturing could find themselves well-positioned amid these shifts. But on the other hand, industries reliant on imports will face headwinds, making selectivity crucial for investors navigating the changing landscape.”

He continues: “The trade war narrative is no longer confined to rhetoric—it is materializing into concrete economic shifts. 

“The challenge for investors is not merely to react, but to anticipate and act decisively.