Trump's return to the White House: Market winners and losers

1 day ago

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By Naomi Rovnick, Amanda Cooper and Dhara Ranasinghe

LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's return to the White House has been met with both relief and disappointment across world markets as investors try to work out what the next four years will bring.

"The approach will be chaotic, unpredictable, spur of the moment and driven by Trump himself," said Russel Matthews, senior portfolio manager, global macro at RBC BlueBay Asset Management.

Here's a look at some of the winners and losers emerging from Trump's first 24 hours in office.

1/ NAME CALLING

Calling out Canada and Mexico as potential targets for tariffs took a further toll on their currencies, which fell sharply following Trump's inauguration speech.

Bets on the Mexican peso or other tariff-exposed emerging market currencies were too risky, said Fidelity International multi-asset manager Becky Qin.

"It is so binary and so dependent on the dollar," she said. "The policy uncertainty is too high."

Goldman Sachs strategists said they see a 70% probability of Trump hitting China with 20% tariffs but said the odds of him fulfilling his pledge for 25% import levies on Canada and Mexico were low.

The dollar is trading near its strongest levels against Canada's currency in almost five years, with the so-called Loonie also weighed down by economic weakness and rate cut expectations.

Markets have swung towards bets that China will not permit its tightly controlled currency to weaken to counter heavy U.S. tariffs. Analysts still expect a 5% to 6% drop by year-end.

Fidelity's Qin said she had a position that would profit if the offshore yuan weakens further against the dollar, which may be one of the few trades that shines if aggressive tariffs spook markets.

2/ ROLLER COASTER

The euro and sterling rallied over 1% on Monday, notching their best one-day gains since late November versus the dollar, cheered by Trump's decision to not immediately impose tariffs.

Yet, Tuesday's falls in European currencies suggested the relief rally was already over.

ING currency strategist Francesco Pesole said if more days pass without Europe being explicitly mentioned in Trump’s tariff comments, the euro could benefit.

"That support may, however, prove rather short-lived as things can – as we learned yesterday with Canada and Mexico – change abruptly on protectionism, and the euro remains generally unappealing from a number of macro fundamentals," he said.

ABN AMRO downgraded its year-end euro/dollar forecast to $0.98 from $1, implying a 5% weakening from current levels.


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