Damus

Recent Notes

Henrik Ekenberg profile picture
Markets rallied Wednesday on relief that tariffs were suspended and military force ruled out. But relief is not resolution. The strategic confusion Greenland's parliamentary representative described continues beneath the surface optimism.

The framework exists as a concept, not a concluded treaty. Details remain under negotiation. Greenland's government and people remain opposed. The path from framework to final agreement remains unclear & contested.

#greenland #Denmark

https://coracle.social/notes/naddr1qvzqqqr4gupzpew7nyhy6rva9qvuznjfv2nq4ru7dax5f83xyfkpjn7wva9ftmu9qy2hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnyv9kh2uewd9hj7qg3waehxw309ahx7um5wgh8w6twv5hszxthwden5te0wfjkccte9eekummjwsh8xmmrd9skctcpzamhxue69uhkummnw3e8yetvv9ujucmvda6kgtcppemhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mp0qq256ttrwvuxx5tsdd6yzd6zdepyusfnxar5vvk5p36
Henrik Ekenberg profile picture
Henrik Ekenberg profile picture
The week ending October 25, 2025, captured a market completely disconnected from economic fundamentals.
The S&P 500 closed at a record high of 6,791.69 on Thursday, rallying 0.79% despite a backdrop of escalating chaos across multiple fronts.

This euphoria persisted even as consumer sentiment crashed to 53.6—the lowest reading in five months and down 24% year-over-year.
The University of Michigan's final October reading revealed collapsing consumer expectations at 50.3, down 32% from a year ago, with inflation and high prices dominating concerns. Yet markets ignored the warning.

The Federal Reserve prepares to cut rates Tuesday and Wednesday, October 28-29, despite inflation running at 3.1%—well above the 2% target—and without access to current economic data due to the government shutdown now in its fourth week.
Policymakers will make monetary policy decisions using six-week-old September data while flying blind through October's actual conditions.

China's Fourth Plenum concluded with vague promises of "technological self-sufficiency" but zero concrete GDP targets, spending commitments, or quantified stimulus—leaving markets to rally on hope rather than policy substance.
Trump abruptly terminated all trade negotiations with Canada over a television commercial, creating fresh uncertainty for the $2.6 trillion bilateral trade relationship.

Through it all, stocks climbed. The Dow notched its 12th record close of 2025. Tech stocks powered gains even after Netflix missed earnings and Tesla's margins collapsed to multi-year lows. Asian markets rallied Friday on optimism about the upcoming Trump-Xi APEC meeting, choosing hope over observable reality.

The gap between market euphoria and economic deterioration has never been wider. Consumer confidence at five-month lows. Inflation accelerating.
Trade relationships fracturing. Government dysfunctional. Corporate margins compressing. Yet equities hit all-time highs.

Something gives eventually—either economic data miraculously improves to justify these valuations, or markets correct violently to reflect reality. Given falling consumer sentiment, persistent inflation above target, and escalating policy chaos, the latter outcome appears far more likely.
The only remaining question is timing.

#Market

Henrik Ekenberg profile picture
What hasn't been sufficiently covered is how Trump's erratic communication style creates operational paralysis for multinational corporations and supply chain managers who need 18-24 month planning horizons to make capital allocation decisions.
Trump's late-night Truth Social post terminating all trade talks with Canada was riddled with typos and fragmented sentences—"TRADE NEGATIONS WITHADA AREEBYATED" and "TFFS VERY IMPORTANT THE NATIONAL AND EOMY"—suggesting it was an impulsive reaction rather than coordinated policy.
The trigger? An Ontario government TV ad featuring a 1987 Ronald Reagan radio address warning that "high tariffs inevitably lead to retaliation" and "millions of people lose their jobs".
This pattern is familiar. Trump threatened 35% universal tariffs on Canada in February, then exempted 85% of Canada-U.S. trade days later when Prime Minister Mark Carney negotiated.
He's threatened to dissolve Great Lakes water-sharing agreements, remove Canada from Five Eyes intelligence sharing, and annex Canada as the 51st state—then walked back or never followed through.
Canadian officials initially treated the annexation threats as jokes before realizing Trump might be serious about destabilizing the relationship.
But Carney's office has learned to wait out the volatile threats, expecting Trump to quietly restart talks within days.
For businesses, this creates an impossible environment. Companies making decisions about cross-border manufacturing, inventory positioning, supplier contracts, and capital investments need stable trade rules.
When the president can terminate negotiations via typo-filled social media posts at 11 PM over a $75,000 TV ad, rational planning becomes impossible.
More than C$3.6 billion in Canadian goods cross the border daily. Auto manufacturers, steel producers, lumber suppliers, and tech companies operate integrated North American supply chains built around the USMCA trade agreement that Trump himself negotiated.
Now he's threatening to blow it up over an advertisement.
The erratic pattern doesn't just create uncertainty—it destroys institutional credibility.
If trade policy can reverse within hours based on emotional reactions to TV ads, long-term commitments become unhedgeable risks. Companies can't price that volatility into contracts or feasibility studies.
Canada might simply ignore this latest outburst and wait for Trump to restart talks quietly next week, as he's done before.
But each cycle of threat-backdown-restart erodes the foundation for the $2.6 trillion bilateral trade relationship. Businesses need predictability. Trump's communication style makes that structurally impossible.
#Market #Trump #Canada