President Donald Trump’s call changed everything. One moment, Vietnam faced punishing U.S. tariffs; the next, its top leader Tô Lâm was suddenly floating the idea of wiping tariffs out entirely. Markets jumped, Nike surged, and economists scrambled to make sense of the shock. But behind the optimism, a quieter warning was alrea…
Trump’s revelation of Tô Lâm’s apparent willingness to slash tariffs to zero sent an immediate jolt through boardrooms and trading floors. Companies deeply invested in Vietnamese manufacturing briefly saw a pathway out of costly new U.S. duties, and investors rushed in. Nike’s stock pop captured the mood: a bet that political brinkmanship might give way to pragmatic compromise and, with it, cheaper goods and steadier supply chains.
Yet the economic backdrop is more complicated than a single upbeat phone call. A strong jobs report signaled resilience, but also masked uneven growth and the looming inflation risks of escalating tariffs. Policymakers at the Federal Reserve now face a delicate balance: acknowledge solid hiring while bracing for potential price pressures driven by trade conflict. The episode is a reminder that markets trade on headlines, but real stability depends on what happens after the cameras turn away—on written agreements, implemented policies, and the patience to see whether promises survive contact with reality.