Business

Trump retaliates against China with tariff hike; stocks sell off

U.S. President Donald Trump retaliated against China on Friday with a series of tweets announcing a hike in tariffs on all Chinese goods. This comes after the stock markets sold off in reaction to Trump angrily ordering U.S. companies to stop doing business with China and accusing his own central banker of being an "enemy" to his economic plan.

U.S. president spars with Fed chief, orders U.S. companies to stop doing business in China

A worker is seen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. Stocks tumbled on Wall Street after U.S. President Donald Trump said he was ordering U.S. companies to consider alternatives to doing business in China. (Richard Drew/Associated Press)

As he'd earlier threatened, Donald Trump retaliated against China on Friday with a series of tweets announcing a hike in tariffs on all Chinese goods. 

This comes after the stock markets sold off in reaction to Trump angrily ordering U.S. companies to stop doing business with China and accusing his own central banker of being an "enemy" to his economic plan.

Shortly after markets closed, Trump tweeted that China should not have retaliated with new tariffs, and that $250 billion worth of products from China will be taxed at 30 per cent, instead of 25 per cent, starting Oct. 1. 

He also tweeted that the remaining $300 billion worth of products from China that were supposed to be taxed at 10 per cent starting Sept. 1 will now be taxed at 15 per cent.

Earlier in the day, while speaking at an economic retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyo., Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell said there's increasing evidence of a global economic slowdown and suggested that uncertainty from the U.S. president's trade wars has contributed to it. He also suggested the trade war Trump started with China is making it harder for central bankers to do their job.

"Trade policy uncertainty seems to be playing a role in the global slowdown and in weak manufacturing and capital spending in the United States," Powell said in his speech.

U.S. President Donald Trump named Jerome Powell to head the Fed in 2017, but their relationship has been rocky of late. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

The U.S. central bank cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time in a decade earlier this month, an indicator that it feels less confident in the prospects for the economy.

Trump welcomed that move and is trying to push the Fed to cut rates even more, but so far the Fed has publicly tried to maintain its independence.

Trump reacted angrily to Powell's speech, tweeting shortly after it ended that the central bank is "very weak" and shouldn't be speaking without consulting him first. He also seemed to accuse Powell of being an "enemy" of the U.S.

Economist and author David Jones said such an attack on a Fed chair sets a dangerous precedent.

"This challenges something that has been sacred in the history of the world's most successful central bank," Jones said. "The central banks that have been successful are those which are independent of political pressures and were free to make the appropriate monetary policy."

Trump's tweet-storm prompted a sell-off on the stock market, as investors who had initially liked the sound of Powell's speech quickly sold off shares as the rhetoric ratcheted up.

Trump went on to "hereby order" U.S. companies to seek alternative markets to China, which announced a new round of tariffs against American goods earlier Friday.

The National Retail Federation, which represents U.S. retailers, said any such plan would be next to impossible to implement.

"Retailers have been diversifying their supply chains, but finding alternative sources is a costly and lengthy process that can take years," the NRF said. "It is unrealistic for American retailers to move out of the world's second largest economy, as 95 per cent of the world's consumers live outside our borders."

Trump also ordered package delivery services UPS, Federal Express and Amazon to inspect any deliveries from China for the powerful opioid drug fentanyl.

Stocks in all three companies were lower as investors digested the logistics of implementing such an order.

The Twitter tirade pushed stock prices lower, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down more than 700 points at one point, before closing down 621 points, to 25,630.

Canadian stocks were not immune to the gloom, with the S&P/TSX composite index down 215 points, or 1.3 per cent, to 16,037.

With files from The Associated Press