Trade war fatigue
Investors around the world are spooked.
The Dow plunged 767 points, or 2.9%, on Monday. The Nasdaq tumbled 3.5%, suffering its longest daily losing streak since just before Trump's 2016 election. The VIX (VIX) volatility index spiked 40% to a seven-month high.
Investors piled into government bonds, driving the 10-year Treasury yield to 1.75%, the lowest level in nearly three years.
"The escalating US-China trade war will certainly be bad for the US economy. How bad is almost impossible to calculate," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at National Securities Corporation.
Hogan said that the worse the trade war gets, the faster a recession could arrive in the United States.
"Historically, recessions occur in reaction to a monetary policy mistake. This is the first time we may have to deal with a trade policy miscalculation," he said.
Many investors and business executives broadly agree with the Trump administration's desire to get China to play fair on trade. Beijing's non-tariff trade barriers, including forced technology transfers, have long hurt American businesses.
However, there is growing concern about Trump's use of tariffs as a way of getting concessions.
Next round of tariffs will hit consumers
Trump blindsided Wall Street last week by announcing plans to impose a 10% tariff on $300 billion of US imports from China.
The new tariffs, which are scheduled to go into effect on September 1, would target everything from apparel and footwear to electronics such as smartphones. More than previous rounds of tariffs that shielded finished goods, these levies would hit US households, the strength of the American economy.
"If you inject uncertainty during back-to-school and holiday shopping, that will have a drag on the economy," Hogan said.
Retail and tech stocks have been hit especially hard by the latest tariff threat. Best Buy (BBY)alone has plunged nearly 15% since Wednesday's close.
The Chamber of Commerce warned last week that these new tariffs "will only inflict greater pain on American businesses, farmers, workers and consumers, and undermine an otherwise strong US economy."
America's farmers won't get relief any time soon. China's Commerce Ministry confirmed that Chinese companies have halted purchases of US agricultural products.
The trade war has forced Washington to come to the rescue of farmers with billions of dollars in aid. Delinquencies on agriculture loans have tripled since mid-2015 to eight-year highs, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank.
FDIC Chairman Jelena McWilliams told CNN Business last week that the agency is "monitoring very closely" how banks in farm states are being impacted by the trade war.
"We may experience more delinquencies, which then become very difficult for those communities and our ag sector," McWilliams said.
Currency war fears
China retaliated on Monday by allowing the yuan to move above the psychologically important ratio of 7 to 1 against the US dollar. The People's Bank of China blamed the weakness on "trade protectionism and new tariffs on China."
"China retaliates: on a scale of 1-10, it's an 11," Chris Krueger, senior policy analyst at the Cowen Washington Research Group, wrote in a note to clients.
Hours later, Trump responded on Twitter, calling the move "currency manipulation" and a "major violation which will greatly weaken China over time."
The fact that China decided not to defend its currency further suggests Beijing is digging in for a longer trade war. Officials are no longer trying to avoid Trump's currency wrath.
"China is taking a darker and more cynical view of Trump's objectives with China," said Michael Hirson, Eurasia Group's practice head of China and Northeast Asia. "They're becoming increasingly pessimistic about their ability to steer Trump away from further escalation."
China's currency move raised the specter of a currency war, where major countries race to devalue their respective currencies.
"It's the currency risk that is the most volatile, hardest to see and the fastest reacting," said Kotok. "That's the left hook that can knock out the boxer."