NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
MilitaryIranNuclearTalksStrikesFebruaryDiplomaticIranianLimitedTargetsGenevaIssuesThursdayTensionsTimelineFacilitiesMissileDigestChinaTariffsPricesOccurBreakthroughPotentially
MilitaryIranNuclearTalksStrikesFebruaryDiplomaticIranianLimitedTargetsGenevaIssuesThursdayTensionsTimelineFacilitiesMissileDigestChinaTariffsPricesOccurBreakthroughPotentially
All Articles
Normalisation of Trump’s chaos can only go so far
South China Morning Post
Published about 3 hours ago

Normalisation of Trump’s chaos can only go so far

South China Morning Post · Feb 26, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

It is one of the oldest sayings on Wall Street, yet the adage “markets hate uncertainty” has never stood up to scrutiny. Like most maxims, it has a ring of truth but is a gross oversimplification. What is indisputable, however, is that for several decades investors took major economic, financial and political trends for granted. For a long period beginning in the 1980s, the world was relatively predictable. Many economists dubbed this era “the great moderation”. Others pointed to the impact of...

Full Article

It is one of the oldest sayings on Wall Street, yet the adage “markets hate uncertainty” has never stood up to scrutiny. Like most maxims, it has a ring of truth but is a gross oversimplification.What is indisputable, however, is that for several decades investors took major economic, financial and political trends for granted. For a long period beginning in the 1980s, the world was relatively predictable. Many economists dubbed this era “the great moderation”. Others pointed to the impact of globalisation and the peace dividend following the end of the Cold War.Yet a year after US President Donald Trump began his second term, this world no longer exists. Although political and economic risks increased significantly in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, Trump has ripped up the geopolitical, economic and financial rule books.In fact, confusion is one of Trump’s most important tactics, along with deflection and coercion. In the past year, his assaults on truth, norms, the rule of law, the global trading system and the independence of the US Federal Reserve have broken so many guardrails that investors have become desensitised to Trump’s egregious actions.The more Trump undermines the foundations of US institutions and the global economy, the less his attacks shock. Chaos has become normalised. The findings of Bank of America’s latest global fund manager survey on February 17 showed that inflation, a sharp rise in bond yields and geopolitical conflicts were among the four biggest “tail risks” in markets.Yet not only have fears of a “hard landing” for the global economy – which were rife when Trump launched his tariff blitz – tapered off, the percentage of respondents anticipating a “soft landing” has fallen sharply. Strikingly, 52 per cent of those polled expected “no landing” in the next 12 months.


Share this story

Read Original at South China Morning Post

Related Articles

South China Morning Postabout 2 hours ago
Poland tells US it won’t be a ‘sucker’ as Trump reshapes Nato

The ⁠US remains Poland’s most ⁠important partner in military ⁠cooperation and Warsaw has been and will remain a loyal ally, but it can’t be a “sucker”, Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said in a speech to parliament on Thursday. His comments reflect the ‌delicate balancing act that Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s pro-EU government must perform in maintaining the strong transatlantic bond they see as crucial for national security at a time when US President Donald Trump is upending old...

South China Morning Postabout 3 hours ago
Hongkongers rush to showrooms as EV tax breaks end, ‘quotas’ sell for HK$60,000

Hong Kong’s decision to end tax breaks for private electric cars has sparked a rush to the showrooms, with some residents even selling their eligibility for the incentive scheme. A car dealer told the South China Morning Post on Thursday that sales had surged by a factor of 17, adding that one customer broke into tears just after midnight, fearing he had missed the registration deadline. “Last night there were many people … there was a queue at one point,” said Eric Wong Ngai-lik, chairman of...

South China Morning Postabout 3 hours ago
Fok welcomes ‘inspiring’ budget, says Asian Games will be part of HK$1.2bn funding review

Hong Kong lawmaker Kenneth Fok Kai‑kong welcomed the government’s HK$1.2 billion investment in sports development as “a timely boost that will inject fresh momentum”, while also urging a more strategic approach to building a sustainable sports industry. Fok, who is also vice-president of the city’s Sports Federation and Olympic Committee (SF&OC), said details on how the money could be spent would be decided following “a comprehensive review of athlete support planned after the Asian...

South China Morning Postabout 3 hours ago
AI committee can help Hong Kong start-ups ‘tackle legal, geopolitical hurdles’

A proposed high-level committee that will focus on artificial intelligence (AI) could help tech start-ups in Hong Kong mitigate legal and geopolitical challenges, as well as gain access to important databases for model training, market leaders have said. But the experts also told the South China Morning Post on Thursday that the committee, which was proposed in the latest budget and will be led by the city’s finance chief, would need to involve a diverse panel of experts and be “action-driven”...

South China Morning Postabout 3 hours ago
Singapore budget surplus: poor ‘fiscal marksmanship’ or prudent forecast?

Singapore’s unexpectedly large budget surplus arises from tough decisions to raise taxes earlier and means that the country is now in a position of strength, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong has said, after MPs questioned the accuracy of his government’s budget forecasts. Earlier this month, Wong revealed in his budget statement that Singapore expected a surplus of S$15.1 billion (US$12 billion), or 1.9 per cent of gross domestic product, for the 2025 financial year ending March, more than double an...

South China Morning Postabout 3 hours ago
SHKP, Hong Kong’s bellwether developer, posts 36% jump in first-half net profit

Sun Hung Kai Properties (SHKP), Hong Kong’s largest developer by market capitalisation, reported a 36.2 per cent year-on-year jump in first-half net profit to HK$10.25 billion (US$1.3 billion). Revenue rose 32 per cent to HK$52.7 billion for the six months ended December from a year earlier, while operating income increased 10.7 per cent to HK$13.4 billion, the developer said in a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Thursday. Underlying profit, which discounts property revaluations, gained...