Merchants work on the ground of the New York Inventory Alternate throughout morning buying and selling on February 20, 2026 in New York Metropolis.
Michael M. Santiago | Getty Pictures
Markets have taken U.S. President Donald Trump’s newest tariff salvos largely of their stride, with traders assessing whether or not the strikes can have an enduring influence on commerce or are one other negotiating tactic.
The market has to date shrugged off the tariffs. Asia shares had been principally increased, safe-haven property stayed agency, with yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury little modified, whereas gold inched about 1% increased. The U.S. greenback index slid round 0.3%.
“The market did not actually react a lot to the information. It was already extensively anticipated,” Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Analysis, instructed CNBC. “The market realized final 12 months that the [global] economic system is remarkably resilient within the face of what I name Trump tariff turmoil.”
Sit on arms and do nothing, that is simply noise, there shall be one thing new to fret about inside a couple of days.
Hugh Dive
Atlas Funds Administration
Trump’s transfer to lift world tariffs to fifteen% from 10% initially introduced, comes after the U.S. Supreme Court docket struck down a broad swath of levies he had imposed below the Worldwide Emergency Financial Powers Act.
Market strategists mentioned that the Supreme Court docket’s ruling appears to be like extra like a procedural reset than a reversal of protectionist coverage. Part 122, below which the brand new tariffs have been imposed, successfully replaces the invalidated IEEPA tariffs on a short lived foundation, whereas leaving in place duties below Part 301 and Part 232, together with these focusing on metal, autos and China.
So, not a lot has modified to unnerve the markets — at the very least, not but.
Sit tight and do nothing?
Analysts counsel that the important thing for traders now could be to be affected person.
“No assertion on commerce coverage from Trump is now handled as sturdy,” mentioned Hugh Dive, chief funding officer at Atlas Funds Administration.
“Sit on arms and do nothing, that is simply noise, there shall be one thing new to fret about inside a couple of days,” he added.
Trump has developed a fame amongst traders for utilizing tariffs as a negotiating tactic, saying sweeping or aggressive measures, then recalibrating as soon as market stress or diplomatic pushback turns into clearer. The transfer has been extensively referred as TACO: Trump At all times Chickens Out.
“The President actually wasn’t going to just accept defeat with out having a counter or technique,” Yardeni mentioned. Nonetheless, he famous that the brand new method is constrained: tariffs below Part 122 are non permanent and tougher to tailor nation by nation.
“It was a lot simpler when he may use tariffs as a sledgehammer,” he instructed CNBC. “Now it is develop into type of a rubber mallet. It is definitely not as highly effective a device.”
As for the way traders ought to place, Yardeni echoed Altas’ Dive: “Sit nonetheless and do nothing. Deal with earnings, deal with the resilience of the economic system.”
Others are a bit extra cautious.
“It will make sense to loosen up on threat except you imagine that you may see clearly by way of the confusion,” mentioned Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers. He famous that traders can take into account trimming U.S. fairness publicity in favor of worldwide firms much less susceptible to U.S. commerce gyrations.
That mentioned, to some extent, traders have already develop into accustomed to the “President’s capability for “anger and need for revenge,” although the escalation serves as an disagreeable reminder, he mentioned.
From a cross-asset perspective, Sosnick mentioned the influence may very well be restricted so long as optimistic investor psychology permits them to look previous the damaging short-term impacts. That mentioned, persistent uncertainty may weigh on world commerce and company planning, making it “extremely troublesome to see how the prospect of future levies will be considered as market pleasant.”
Cryptocurrencies noticed a sharper response Monday. Bitcoin’s slide of greater than 5% displays its standing as what one professional referred to as “a high-beta liquidity asset than a standard protected haven.”
“A 5% transfer is nicely inside its regular volatility vary,” mentioned Billy Leung, funding strategist at International X Australia. Absent a regulatory shock, such pullbacks are usually flow-driven quite than fundamentals pushed, he added.
Bitcoin has been on a gentle decline since final October after it crossed $125,000, with the downturn extending into 2026. The world’s largest cryptocurrency is down 26% to date this 12 months and has misplaced over 47% because the October excessive.
Leung’s base case is that markets deal with the 15% tariffs as “extra noise than a structural reset.”
“There could also be an preliminary volatility spike, however except this evolves right into a clearly sturdy and broad-based escalation, it’s unlikely to materially derail world earnings or development expectations.”

