FirstFT: Nvidia chips worth $1bn smuggled to China despite Trump export controls
Also in today’s newsletter, Thai fighter jets strike Cambodia, and Trump clashes with Fed chair
Also in today’s newsletter, Thai fighter jets strike Cambodia, and Trump clashes with Fed chair
Accord means tariffs for UK petrol and diesel car manufacturers will fall to headline 10% rate only in 2031
I see this constantly remarked upon, so I wanted to check the data. Figure 1: Consumption, 2017$ (bold black, left scale), Services Consumption, 2017$ (tan, left scale), Retail Sales in 1999M12$ (light blue, left scale), all in logs 2025M04=0; U.Mich. Survey of Consumers expectations (red, right scale). Source: BEA, Census, BLS, U.Michigan Survey of Consumers, and author’s calculations. Whether the consumer is surprisingly resilient depends on what one expected consumption to do given determinants (income, expected income, costs, uncertainty, wealth…). Without a full fledged model, I can still observe that real consumption’s trend has changed to flat. Since this series includes durables consumption expenditures — which has been distorted due to front-running tariffs — one can look to services consumption. This variable should be more sensitive to permanent income (in the Hall (1979) sense). Here, the break in trend is apparent as well. Finally, real retail sales have declined since March. With a June observation, we have a more recent reading on the consumer’s behavior — and it’s not indicating a strong resurgence. Consumer expectations have improved, and one would expect something of a rebound in consumption in July. However, expectations have not recovered to anything like November levels (77, compared to July preliminary 59).
Trump announces tariffs of “only” 15% on Japanese imported goods, and the market jumps. Source: TradingEconomics. Subsequent accounts note the optimism that a deal with the EU will entail tariffs of “only” 15%. Time consider what the effective tariff rate will be, incorporating this “deal” (which is only as good as the virtual paper it’s written on, given Trump’s predilection for fickleness).
Brussels designs countermeasures that can be activated quickly if Donald Trump fails to stick to agreed terms
Roaring black market for US semiconductors operates despite efforts to curb Beijing’s high-tech ambitions
Permitting and housing reforms as well as R&D investment and more highly-skilled immigrants are needed
Central bank reduces main policy rate to 43%, close to level in March at start of government crackdown
Also in this newsletter: EU simplification savings worth €8.5bn and Zelenskyy’s anti-corruption power grab
Swiss drugmaker says cutting out industry intermediaries could shave 50% off drug prices in US