⚡️💬 Today is likely to be a volatile day on the markets.

The famous Liberation Day has arrived, and it will mark the implementation of US tariffs on other countries.

Nevertheless, I think all this has been largely priced in during the downturn of recent weeks, so I'm curious to see how the end of this week unfolds.

What do you think? #asknostr

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

From here it's up only

Noted ✍️

It has been confirmed that there will be no tariffs on zaps ✅

Nice 👏 And personal thanks to you for your regular support nostr:npub1wp4f2lfrg9jqtqcjyhg5ua45f2857suvac746vysaky63mwcwk7qpal8ec

I think were going up. I agree tariffs are priced in and the fact they are actually set and implemented gives a bit of stability which is what markets really want

What I'm watching: GameStop announcement for 1.4b worth of Bitcoin bought

Tariffs are not a solution and only increase inflation within the borders where its implemented. And you forgot about GREED. When Samsung started to manufacture washers and dryers and sell them into US markets, Maytag et all US manufactures couldn’t compete against Samsung pricing. Huge tariffs were implemented, pricing Samsung above US counterparts. US purchasers believed that Samsung was higher priced due to its better quality(not true as I has a POS Samsung dishwasher that only lasted 2 years).

What US manufactures decided to do was increase their pricing to match Samsungs pricing with tariffs included.

Now, who pays tariffs? We do as consumers as companies don’t take on that cost themselves.

Tariffs dont work in this case as greed takes more capital from the us, the consumer.

Tariffs may be rotten, but they're only a tenth as rotten as income taxes.

Hi flash 🤟😉🏴‍☠️ Absolutely, the markets have been bracing for this moment, so much of the volatility might already be priced in. The real test will be how global markets react in the days following the implementation whether it leads to a further downturn or if investors take a more measured approach. Tariffs can create short-term disruptions, but the longer-term effects depend on how quickly companies adapt and whether new trade relationships or supply chains emerge. It’ll be interesting to see if this just marks another dip, or if it sparks a larger shift.