Unpacking Tariff Uncertainty

Resigned Optimism

The second quarter of 2025 was defined by an optimism that the global economy will find a path forward, where the initial shock of aggressive tariff announcements was replaced by a period of cautious uncertainty as the resilient and resourceful U.S. consumer provided encouragement for domestic equities. Markets avoided further steep declines and gradually moved toward a course for growth as investors came to terms with tariff uncertainty, inflationary pressures, and slowing global growth.

Markets have been forgiving of the new tariff regime, perhaps correctly anticipating that the most extreme measures are negotiating tactics that will eventually moderate. However, our view is that the current environment introduces substantial volatility and is, on balance, a headwind for the U.S. economy. This reinforces our long­ held theme that robust global diversification is essential. The portfolio adjustments we have made, such as increasing allocations to diversified, low ­volatility international equities, reflect this. The central challenge for investors is no longer simply investing broadly in the global market but interpreting the relationship between policy actions and economic impact.

The Economy

The primary challenge in assessing the economy today is that traditional models and data signals are being distorted by broadcasted, large­ scale policy interventions. Economic data has been noisy and has deviated from usual historical patterns. Therefore, traditional economic models and even statistics like GDP can be misleading. Anticipation of tariffs can induce short­ term, atypical behavior like inventory build­ups or pull­ forwards in consumption. The market may not be fully accounting for the fact that these economic signals have a different meaning than they normally would, creating a source of risk. While this is not devastating news, it suggests that many of the unknowns do not currently favor the U.S. economy.

The Tariff Impasse and Its Economic Drag

The most impactful development remains the ongoing uncertainty surrounding U.S. trade policy. A fundamental paradox lies at the heart of the tariff strategy: the tariffs cannot simultaneously be a temporary bargaining chip for negotiations and a permanent, predictable policy designed to encourage long­t erm domestic manufacturing investment. For tariffs to effectively stimulate large­ scale capital expenditure—building factories, developing supply chains, and training workforces—businesses require a stable, long­ term policy environment. As long as tariffs remain in flux and subject to negotiation, they are unlikely to trigger a meaningful resurgence in domestic manufacturing. To date, while we have not yet seen catastrophic harm from the tariffs implemented, we have also seen little evidence of their benefits.

The lack of a significant inflationary spike thus far can be attributed to several factors: companies may be absorbing higher costs in their margins to protect market share; or the tariffs may be acting as a tax on consumption, leading to a reduction in economic activity that offsets the direct price impact. Regardless of the mechanism, the primary economic effect of the current tariff regime is not a major price shock, but rather a persistent state of uncertainty that discourages investment and clouds the outlook for long­ term growth.