DoujinStars
The Long Investor
The Long Investor

patreon


The LIT Sunday News

U.S. Stocks Lose $5.4 Trillion in Two-Day Rout as Trump Tariffs Spark Recession Fears

Key Developments

U.S. equities lost $5.4 trillion in market value over two days following President Trump’s announcement of sweeping new tariffs, sparking global recession concerns and triggering China’s retaliatory duties.

Markets reacted sharply to fears that the 10% universal tariff and “reciprocal” levies will derail global trade and tip the U.S. into recession.

Economic and Market Impact

Leading economists and banks slashed U.S. growth forecasts for 2025:

Fed Chair Jay Powell warned that the tariffs would lead to “higher inflation and slower growth,” adding that their scale and economic impact are larger than expected.

Despite a strong March jobs report (unemployment at 4.2%), the mood in financial markets turned deeply risk-off:

Geopolitical Context

Trump’s tariff policy — branded “liberation day” — aims to rebalance trade, but markets see it as a trigger for global economic fragmentation. China’s aggressive response and other retaliatory threats have amplified downside risks.

Trump called for Fed rate cuts, but Powell’s speech emphasized the negative inflationary effects of the tariffs, limiting the Fed’s flexibility.

TL;DR

Trump’s aggressive tariff escalation has triggered a $5.4tn stock market rout, renewed trade war fears, and steep downward revisions to U.S. economic growth forecasts. As China retaliates and volatility surges, analysts warn of an impending U.S. and EU recession unless tensions de-escalate rapidly. Markets are in full risk-off mode, with tech stocks plunging, commodities tanking, and Treasury yields falling.

Trump Hints at China Tariff Relief in Exchange for TikTok Divestment Deal

Key Developments

President Donald Trump has suggested a potential reduction in tariffs on Chinese imports if Beijing approves ByteDance’s sale of TikTok, linking trade policy with national security concerns for the first time in this saga.

The move introduces a quid pro quo-style negotiation, adding complexity to both the U.S.–China trade war and the TikTok national security issue.

Structure of the Proposed Deal

The current proposal would see TikTok spun out into a new U.S.-based entity with a revised ownership structure to comply with U.S. law:

One sticking point remains: who controls TikTok’s algorithm. Options include:

Geopolitical and Policy Context

The proposal is designed to navigate Chinese regulatory red lines while satisfying U.S. security concerns around algorithmic influence and data access.

The Chinese government has not commented, and ByteDance has yet to respond publicly.

TL;DR

Trump has floated a tariff-for-TikTok deal, potentially easing import levies if Beijing allows ByteDance to divest TikTok under U.S.-approved terms. A new ownership structure is nearing finalization, but algorithm control remains the critical hurdle. The deal would represent a major intersection of trade, tech, and national security, with implications far beyond TikTok.

Trump–Powell Feud Erupts Amid Market Turmoil, Tariffs, and Recession Fears

Key Developments

President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell are now in open conflict, as escalating tariffs, a collapsing stock market, and recession warnings converge into a high-stakes political and financial showdown.

With the Dow down 3,000 points, Trump may be framing Powell as a scapegoat for the market meltdown, potentially setting up a narrative shift if the crisis deepens.

Political and Market Tensions

The feud has broken long-standing norms of Fed independence and has stirred concern over institutional stability:

Powell also implied recent strong job data do not yet reflect the damage from tariff uncertainty, pointing to rising recession risk now being acknowledged by external forecasters.

Market Reaction and Policy Risks

While Trump’s tariffs were meant to protect U.S. industry, markets are instead pricing in economic instability:

Economists warn that if Powell succumbs to political pressure, inflation expectations and bond yields may rise, worsening the economic outlook.

Broader Implications

The public clash between the White House and the Fed has stoked fears that American exceptionalism is faltering, with political interference eroding confidence in once-independent institutions.

“If America starts to act like a banana republic without bananas,” Arends writes, “should the U.S. stock market trade at a premium — or a discount?”

TL;DR

A full-blown power struggle between Trump and Fed Chair Powell has erupted just as markets plunge and recession fears grow. Trump is pushing for an emergency rate cut while laying the groundwork to blame Powell if the crisis worsens. Powell, meanwhile, is holding the line on Fed independence, warning that Trump’s tariff blitz is inflating risk and threatening growth. Markets now face not only economic turmoil — but institutional instability at the heart of U.S. monetary policy.

China’s AI Race Intensifies as DeepSeek and Alibaba Surge Ahead

Key Developments

China’s AI ecosystem is advancing rapidly, but internal disparities are emerging as leading firms like DeepSeek and Alibaba race ahead with major model upgrades.

These breakthroughs bring Chinese models closer to U.S. leaders like OpenAI, while also expanding real-world use cases and global developer access.

Market and Industry Impact

The rapid pace of advancement is triggering a divergence within China’s tech sector, as not all firms keep up.

“The model that wins the most users today will probably dominate tomorrow’s platforms, infrastructure, and government contracts.”

This shift from collective progress to competitive stratification marks a turning point in China’s AI narrative.

Strategic Context

AI leadership is now seen as a core pillar of long-term business growth in China. Winning models can secure access to:

In China’s governance framework, AI dominance can mean recurring, state-backed revenues, making current model races not just a tech contest, but a high-stakes strategic imperative.

TL;DR

China’s AI boom is evolving into a winner-takes-most race, with DeepSeek and Alibaba pulling ahead on performance and deployment. As models increasingly power mobile, enterprise, and public sector applications, the market is shifting its bets toward firms positioned to lead the next phase of cloud and smart infrastructure AI — leaving laggards like Baidu at risk of being sidelined.

China Expresses Optimism on Deeper Financial Ties with UK Amid Green Bond Launch

Key Developments

China’s vice-finance minister Liao Min voiced optimism over deepening Sino-British financial cooperation, as China launched its first renminbi-denominated sovereign green bonds in London.

The issuance follows several high-level diplomatic visits, signaling thawing UK–China relations under Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government.

Diplomatic Context

The event comes amid a renewed diplomatic push between the UK and China:

Liao acknowledged bilateral relations have had “ups and downs”, but pointed to growing convergence on financial services, investment, and climate goals.

Green Bond Strategy and Global Ambitions

China plans to broaden its green bond issuance globally, with potential expansion in scope, currency types, and issuance locations.

The move also reflects London’s continued relevance as a global financial hub, particularly in sustainable finance, despite broader geopolitical friction.

TL;DR

China’s vice-finance minister expressed optimism over stronger UK–China financial ties during the launch of renminbi green bonds in London, part of China’s growing global climate finance strategy. Amid a renewed wave of diplomatic engagement under PM Starmer, both nations are positioning economic and climate cooperation as foundational to future bilateral relations.

Amazon Set to Launch First Kuiper Satellites, Challenging Starlink's Dominance

Key Developments

Amazon will begin deploying its Project Kuiper satellite constellation on April 9, marking its first serious challenge to Elon Musk’s Starlink in the satellite broadband market.

This launch follows Amazon’s two prototype satellite tests in October 2023 and is a critical milestone as the company races against an FCC-imposed deadline.

Market and Industry Impact

Amazon’s entry could break the strategic dominance of Starlink, which currently:

Governments have grown uneasy with Starlink’s influence, particularly after threats of service withdrawal during the U.S.-Ukraine talks.

Amazon’s move provides a long-awaited alternative, though real competition will depend on execution and speed of deployment.

Operational Challenges and Timeline

Despite bold ambitions, experts warn that Amazon faces major logistical hurdles:

Amazon says it aims to offer operational service this year, but coverage will expand gradually.

Strategic Context

The Kuiper–Starlink rivalry reflects a broader geopolitical and commercial race to control low Earth orbit connectivity:

TL;DR

Amazon is finally entering the satellite broadband race, launching its first 27 Kuiper satellites to challenge Musk’s Starlink monopoly. While the move is welcomed by regulators and governments wary of SpaceX’s dominance, Amazon must overcome massive manufacturing and deployment hurdles to catch up. With FCC deadlines looming, Kuiper’s performance in 2025 could define the next era of satellite-powered internet access.

Tesla Suffers Worst Quarter Since 2022 as Deliveries Tumble

Key Developments

Tesla delivered just 336,681 vehicles in Q1 2025 — well below both analyst expectations (390,000) and last year’s Q1 total (387,000). This marks the company’s weakest quarter since 2022 and places it behind China’s BYD, which delivered 416,388 EVs in the same period.

Market and Industry Impact

Tesla’s underperformance coincides with:

Tesla’s U.S. market share slipped, with deliveries falling 11% YoY in Q1, per Autodata — despite rivals like GM posting +17% Q1 growth amid pre-tariff demand.

Operational Challenges

Tesla cited production losses tied to Model Y line upgrades, though recovery is reportedly underway.

Political Fallout and Brand Erosion

Musk’s dual role as CEO and political influencer has intensified criticism:

“This quarter was an example of the damage Musk is causing Tesla... This is a full-blown crisis and it’s primarily self-inflicted.” – Dan Ives, Wedbush

TL;DR

Tesla’s Q1 delivery miss underscores growing brand, operational, and competitive pressures — compounded by Elon Musk’s divisive political activism. With sales falling short across the U.S., Europe, and China, and rivals like BYD pulling ahead, Tesla faces a self-inflicted identity crisis just as it prepares for the next leg of its EV and autonomy journey.

McLaren to Merge with EV Start-up Forseven Backed by NIO in Radical Makeover

Key Developments

British supercar maker McLaren will merge with UK EV start-up Forseven, in a major restructuring under new owner CYVN Holdings. The Abu Dhabi investment group, which also backs Chinese EV maker NIO, completed its acquisition of McLaren Automotive and took a minority stake in McLaren’s F1 team.

Financial and Strategic Drivers

McLaren has been loss-making for five years and sought a partner to fund new model development. Talks with CYVN began a year ago.

Market Context

McLaren’s move comes as Trump’s 25% car tariffs raise costs for foreign-made vehicles entering the U.S., McLaren’s biggest market. Other luxury brands like Ferrari and Lamborghini have boosted growth via SUVs — a space McLaren has historically avoided.

TL;DR

McLaren will merge with British EV start-up Forseven, backed by CYVN and NIO, in a strategic overhaul aimed at expanding its model range, strengthening its EV capabilities, and securing long-term growth. The move positions McLaren to join the electric SUV race while cautiously navigating the transition from petrol and hybrid supercars.

Aston Martin Raises £125mn to Offset Trump’s Tariff Blow

Key Developments

Aston Martin will raise over £125 million to soften the financial impact of Donald Trump’s 25% tariff on imported cars, which could shave up to £30 million off the company’s gross profit this year.

Key measures include:

• A £52.5mn share issue to chair Lawrence Stroll’s consortium, boosting its stake from 28% to 33%

• A planned sale of the company’s ~5% stake in the Aston Martin Racing F1 team at a premium to its £74mn book value

• Proceeds aimed at shoring up finances as the company navigates exposure to the US market, which accounts for 30% of annual sales

Financial and Strategic Response

CEO Adrian Hallmark reaffirmed Aston Martin’s 2025 profitability target, saying the group will counteract tariff pressure through:

• Price increases on new vehicles

• Higher-margin bespoke/customization offerings

• Ongoing internal cost-cutting

Despite these actions, volume growth expectations were revised down from “mid-single digit” to “modest growth.”

Market Reaction

The market welcomed the funding move, sending shares up 13% on Monday. This rebound comes after a 43% drop since February, when the company reported a £100mn operating loss. The projected £30mn tariff hit roughly equals Aston Martin’s anticipated EBIT for 2025, highlighting the scale of the threat.

Strategic Context

The financing strategy demonstrates Aston Martin’s shift toward long-term stabilization under Stroll, Geely, and Saudi Arabia’s PIF. The F1 divestment also capitalizes on soaring valuations in the motorsport world—AMR GP may now be worth £1.5bn, up from £1bn when Arctos Partners invested last year.

While the funding is partially driven by the tariff shock, Stroll emphasized his ongoing commitment to the brand and called the timing of the announcement a coincidence.

TL;DR

Facing a £30mn tariff hit from Trump’s 25% US auto levies, Aston Martin is raising £125mn via a share sale and a divestment of its F1 stake. With price hikes, customization margins, and cost cuts, the company still expects to reach profitability in 2025—but its volume outlook has dimmed.

The LIT Sunday News

Comments

What a week

Chris H

So far local eu news and expressions of local eu leaders seems to point to a stance on USA that does not favor the latter.

FB


More Creators