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Tariffs, Trade Deals, and Central Bank Watch: A Critical Week for Markets

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This is a significant week in terms of macroeconomic headlines, key data releases, central bank decisions, and major trade policy developments. We get numbers for growth, inflation and decision and insights into monetary policy. Combining this with ongoing trade policy developments, we have a key week which may shape how the rest of the year unfolds.

Below is a consolidated summary of the latest trade negotiations, scheduled economic releases, and policy outlooks.

US – EU Trade Deal

  • US–EU Tariffs: The US will impose a 15% tariff on most EU goods, including cars, semiconductors, and pharmaceuticals, but retain a 50% tariff on steel and aluminium with a new quota system.
  • Exemptions: Zero-for-zero tariffs agreed for agriculture, aircraft parts, and chemicals; aircraft exports are temporarily exempt.
  • EU Commitments: The EU will invest $600 billion in the US and purchase $750 billion in US energy, mainly LNG.
  • Agriculture: The EU will lower tariffs on many US agricultural goods, though not comprehensively.
  • Political Reactions: EU leaders are mixed, Germany and the Netherlands praised the deal, France called it unbalanced, and Hungary viewed it unfavorably.

The deal is not final until it is ratified by all EU national parliaments and the EU Parliament.

China Talks: US and China expected to extend their trade truce by 90 days. US-China meeting expected in Stockholm on Monday and Tuesday. Trump to freeze export controls to secure a deal. A group of US executives will visit China for trade discussions, organized by the US-China Business Council.

South Korea Trade Talks: Korea proposes a shipbuilding partnership with the US and is preparing a trade package.

UK–US Relations: PM Starmer and Trump to meet in Scotland to discuss the UK–US trade deal implementation, Middle East ceasefire, and pressure on Russia.

Thus far, the US has announced trade deals with the UK, Vietnam, Philippines, Indonesia, Japan and The EU. Trade delegations are working to finalize deals with China, Mexico, Canada.

Key Economic Data Releases

Monday: Treasury refunding financing estimates.
Supply: 2-Year and 5-Year Note Auction, 3 & 6-Month Bill Auction

Tuesday: US Advance Goods Trade Balance, Wholesale Inventories Advance, , (Jun), , Australian Q2
Supply: 7-Year Note Auction

Wednesday: German GDP Q2, EUR GDP Q2, US Non-farm Employment, US GDP Q2, Crude Oil Inventories, Chinese

Canada: Interest Rate Decision, Rate Statement, Monetary Policy Report, BoC Press Conference
US: , , Fed Press Conference
Japan: , Monetary Policy Statement

Thursday: EU Unemployment (Jun), US PCE & Price Index (Jun)
Japan: BoJ Press Conference

Friday: EU CPI, US , , Average Hourly Earnings, ISM Manufacturing PMI, Michigan 1-Year & 5-Year Inflation Expectations.

It is also a busy earnings week. See here for a complete earnings schedule.

Markets are interpreting trade deals as positive news thus far. The dollar is strengthening.

As we previously mentioned, we anticipate no rate cuts this year as economic data proves to be resilient and inflation largely under control. WSJ also posted an article stating that most tariffs costs are being absorbed by companies due to weaker pricing power. We previously wrote about this on our July, 14th Investing.com blog: “ In our analysis, the inflation impact of tariffs may not show up until Q4 2025 or early 2026, as tariff threats are mostly used as a lever to negotiate deals. While effective tariff rates have increased, as Trump reshapes how tariffs are viewed, cost pass-through to consumers will be limited in Q3 2025, as companies’ front-loaded inventory helps mitigate the risks of increased tariff exposure.

So, what we have is an interesting development shaping up where, while inflation may rise and remain sticky, it is yet to be seen whether slowing consumer spending will weaken enough to the point where companies must start offering discounts, which would nullify the tariff risk to the end consumer and result in companies absorbing all tariffs. This scenario will see reduced earnings margins leading into the last quarter and early 2026. However, it will materially reduce risks of higher inflation.”

In our view, the US dollar has a higher probability to rally in the short-term i.e., Q3 as markets re-align FX rate differentials. Bond yields stabilize, Equities continue pushing higher, while Gold retraces as previously mentioned. This in our view, is what investors and participants refer to as the Goldilocks scenario. If this plays out as expected we anticipate continued strength with AI, tech, energy and defense sectors outperforming into mid- 2026. MNQ (Nasdaq Micro Futures) – 4-Hour Chart

Institutional View: Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley also sees no rate cuts in 2025, despite market pricing for two 25 bps cuts. They forecast more aggressive cuts in 2026 due to:

  • Tariff-related inflation emerging before labor market deterioration
  • Slowing US growth, as fiscal support fades
  • Impact of tighter immigration policy and global trade realignment

That said, MS continues to cite longer-term risks to the dollar, including:

  • Twin deficits (fiscal + current account)
  • Ongoing debate around USD’s safe haven status
  • USD hedging activity picking up by international investors
  • Strained credibility of the Fed due to tension between Fed Chair and the US Administration

How Fed policy evolves in Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 will depend heavily on the incoming Fed Chair nominee, who is expected to replace Jerome Powell in May 2026. This nomination could significantly influence future policy direction around growth and inflation targets.

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Derivatives trading involves a substantial risk of loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results.





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