Tariff uncertainty continues market volatility - podcast episode cover

Tariff uncertainty continues market volatility

Mar 07, 202511 min
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Summary

This episode of the FT News Briefing covers a range of financial and geopolitical topics. It begins with discussion of Donald Trump's crypto venture and its implications, then shifts to market reactions to Trump's tariff policies and Germany's debt plans. The episode concludes with analysis of the ECB's interest rate cut and the EU's increased focus on defense spending and support for Ukraine amidst changing transatlantic relations.

Episode description

Donald Trump’s crypto project made at least $350mn from the launch of his memecoin, and FT markets columnist Katie Martin unpacks the week in markets. The European Central Bank cut interest rates to 2.5 per cent yesterday, plus EU leaders held an emergency summit to talk about defence spending and support for Ukraine. 


Mentioned in this podcast:

Donald Trump’s crypto project netted $350mn from presidential memecoin 

ECB cuts interest rate to 2.5% 

US stocks struggle as ‘America First’ bets backfire 

Global bond sell-off deepens as Germany jolts markets 


The FT News Briefing is produced by Fiona Symon, Sonja Hutson, Kasia Broussalian, Ethan Plotkin, Lulu Smyth, and Marc Filippino. Additional help from Breen Turner, Sam Giovinco, Peter Barber, Michael Lello, David da Silva and Gavin Kallmann. Our engineer is Joseph Salcedo. Topher Forhecz is the FT’s executive producer. The FT’s global head of audio is Cheryl Brumley. The show’s theme song is by Metaphor Music.


Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com

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Transcript

We're Equinor, an energy company searching for better. Currently, we supply 27% of the UK's gas, 15% of its oil, and we're playing our part in the UK's energy transition. We invested 20% of our global growth spend in renewables and lower carbon solutions. Today, our wind farms power 750,000 homes, and we expect this to grow to over 7 million UK households. We're an energy company searching for better.

Equinor.co.uk Good morning from the Financial Times. Today is Friday, March 7th, and this is your FT News Briefing. Donald Trump's latest crypto project is turning out to be quite lucrative and it has been an intense week in the markets. The confidence and the certainty has just gone.

Investors can't be sure that if Donald Trump says this is what I'm going to do, that it's going to actually happen. Plus, EU leaders held an emergency summit in support of Ukraine yesterday. I'm Mark Filipino, and here's the news you need to start your day. Donald Trump's meme coin is making him a lot of money. Trump launched the token before he returned to the White House in January, and the FT has found that it's made him at least $350 million since then.

But making that much money off crypto comes with some scrutiny when you're president. Investors and ethics experts say the sale of crypto would basically let Trump channel anonymous donations. The White House and the meme coin's website did not respond to requests for comment. Another week, another wild ride in markets. US stocks are down after Donald Trump's tariffs sent investors in a tailspin. And Germany set the global bond market on fire.

Luckily, I have the FT's markets columnist, Katie Martin, with me to help make sense of it all. Hi, Katie. Hi. I hope you don't think I'm going to make perfect sense of it all. I'll do my best. No, no. I don't know that there's a way to do that, but let's just...

Let's just take it bit by bit chronologically, Katie. Let's start in the U.S. at the beginning of the week. Equities kicked off Monday already a bit down. Then Tuesday, they really took a hit. That's thanks to Trump's tariff announcements, right? So if you remember, we went into 2025. Every investor on the planet, certainly every investor that I spoke to, every strategist at an investment bank was saying, American exceptionalism, American exceptionalism, the only way forward is to be.

as heavily exposed as you can be to US markets because they're going to outshine the rest of the world over the course of this year because of the deregulation and the tax cuts that the new president is bringing in. This has gone very wrong and it went particularly wrong over the course of this week. We had the confirmation that tariffs were going to come through on Canada and Mexico. Then they were kind of delayed again and we're in this kind of...

fuzzy situation where we don't really know what tariffs are in and what tariffs are out. And this uncertainty is really starting to eat away at US markets. Okay. Do you expect things to turn around now that those pauses have happened? No. I say no because the point is that now the confidence and the certainty has just gone. Investors can't be sure that if Donald Trump says this is what I'm going to do, that it's going to actually happen. So what we've seen is that stocks have...

wiped out almost all of the gains that they saw after Trump was re-elected. Meanwhile, the market that is absolutely off to the races is stocks in Europe. All places. Nobody that I spoke to at the start of this year had a big European bet on. And markets there are absolutely racing ahead. And this disparity is very unusual and it's not a great...

market endorsement of Trump's new agenda. Okay. I think we've spent enough time on America for now. Let's move into Germany. We mentioned on the show yesterday that a high-stakes government... debt deal basically they broke the debt break uh sent the bond market on a craze walk us through that

So there has been this idea running into the elections in Germany that happened recently that maybe they would ease up on some of the restrictions that they impose on themselves on borrowing money and spending money. But nobody anticipated that Germany would be quite as aggressive as they have been. So they've said there will be...

pretty much unlimited scope for spending on defense. And there will be a massive fund, 500 billion euros for infrastructure spending. And how exactly did markets react to that? So what we've seen is that German government bonds have fallen in price really hard. So the yields have... rushed higher at the fastest pace in nearly 30 years. This is the market's way of saying this is going to be really good for growth. And I think that's interesting in itself, right? Because yes, the German...

government is going to be spending lots of taxpayer money. And normally that's just seen as, you know, government spending money that they don't have and that it won't really foster growth. In this situation, the market is taking a somewhat different view and saying that defence spending...

in and of itself, should ripple through the rest of the economy and actually be quite supportive. So it's a very different way of the market looking at this sort of fiscal spending. Katie, one last question for you, and this one's a big one. Are we ever going to get a quiet week in markets? No. I thought you might appreciate a short, snappy answer. Sorry. Okay. Well, we'll just have to have you back on to do this all again. Okay, fine. Fair enough. That's the FT's Katie Martin. Thanks, Katie.

Pleasure. The European Central Bank cut interest rates again. They're down a quarter point to 2.5%. It is the sixth... time. The bank has cut rates since June. Now the ECB did signal that it probably won't keep up that pace. From here on out, the central bank is likely to slow down reductions, saying that monetary policy isn't so restrictive anymore. Although...

The ECB once again scaled back its economic growth forecast for 2025, while saying it's also expecting slightly higher inflation for the year. So, long story short, it's complicated. Leaders from the European Union gave the green light yesterday to increase new defense spending. They also doubled down on their support for Ukraine. This all happened at an emergency summit in Brussels yesterday.

Here to walk me through the developments is my colleague, Henry Foy. Hey, Henry. Hey, Mark. So let's take this step-by-step, Henry, starting with the developments on defense. What sort of initiatives is the EU looking at? So this week, the European Commission, which is the civil service of the EU, if you like, came out with a list of ideas they said would help European countries increase their defence spending.

Two are really eye-catching. The first is a creation of a new loan instrument that would essentially loan out 150 billion euros to countries to spend on defence. That would be loaned against the EU's common budget. This is quite a big step for the EU.

to be sort of funding weapons production with the EU budget money. And the second step is to essentially say, OK, we have rules governing how much you're allowed to take on as deficits each year and how much your debt's allowed to be. We're going to scrap those rules when it comes to... to defense spending. And for the next four years, you can spend as much as you like on defense. And we essentially won't calculate that when we come to assess whether or not your debts and your deficits are fair.

Yeah, you kind of spoke to this already, but how big of a deal are those two initiatives? I mean, is this a sea change for Europe? It's a sea change in a number of ways. So on the debt and deficit rules, the EU has a number of countries who are known as the frugals. They like countries to be more fiscally constrained. These are the Germans, the Dutch, the Danes, the Finns. So for them...

to say, do you know what? We should scrap these rules for defence. That is quite a big deal. And Germany has made a real, real shift this week in saying, we're going to spend loads more on defence. And also, we don't mind if our EU allies, who we've been really strict with in recent years on their deficit,

break those rules in order to spend more on defense. And then on the loan side, yeah, it's pretty extraordinary to be in a world where the EU is saying, look, our budget, which has a very strict rule that says the EU budget cannot fund weapons.

to say, okay, we're going to borrow money against this budget in the market, loan it out to our member states. It really does go to the heart of how big a change we're seeing in the EU when it comes to defense right now. Now, when it comes to supporting Ukraine, What did leaders at the summit have to say about that? So, Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, came and joined the leaders for lunch, and then they had a debate on what they should say in a joint statement.

Viktor Orban, Hungary's pro-Russian prime minister, had said he would not agree any language supporting Ukraine in response to US President Donald Trump's shift towards that conflict. So the other 26 said, fine, we don't care that you're going to veto this. We're going to issue a statement by ourselves as 26. It's important for us to come out and show that we are with Zelensky. We support him even as the American relationship with Ukraine gets more and more strained. Henry, it's been...

A week now, since the EU got this wake-up call from Zelensky's tense meeting at the White House with Donald Trump. Do you think the bloc is adequately heeding it? I think they definitely understand the gravity of the situation. I think they...

completely realize that they are dealing with an America that is totally different from anything they've seen for decades. I think what we've seen this week indeed shows that many, many European capitals are realizing this is a once in a generation moment, that things have...

really changed. But I think it remains to be seen whether or not they go the whole way in addressing what is really quite a seismic shift in transatlantic relations. What is the whole way? What would you consider the whole way?

Talking to officials at the summit yesterday, what we were told is that even this €150 billion loan facility, that's between 5% to 10% of what the EU needs to spend in addition on defence. They also, of course... may well need to spend a huge amount of money on the reconstruction.

of Ukraine or the defense of Ukraine without US support. So enormous amounts of money we're talking about here, Mark. And I think that is the sea change that Europeans have to realize. They can no longer rely on America. And so this is all on them. So I think it's going to take...

a lot more of these meetings, a lot more of these moments where European leaders realize they're going to have to change the way they've looked at their own safety. Henry Foy is the FT's Brussels Bureau Chief. Thanks, Henry. Thanks so much. You can read more on all of these stories for free when you click the links in our show notes. This has been your daily FT News Briefing. Check back next week for the latest business news.

The FT News Briefing is produced by Sonia Hudson, Fiona Simon, Lulu Smith, Ethan Plotkin, Kasha Broussalian, and me, Mark Filipino. Our engineer is Joseph Salcedo. We had help this week from Katya Kumkova, Michael Lello, Peter Barber, and Gavin Kallman. Producer is Topher Forges. Cheryl Brumley is the FT's Global Head of Audio. And our theme song is by Metaphor Music.

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