It’s Over: Trump Just Broke The Stock Market

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TARIFFS IN 2025:
Think of this like an additional ‘tax’ that’s collected when you import goods from one country to another. The theory is that, if imported goods become more expensive, it’ll encourage people to buy and manufacture locally, instead – or, if they don’t, then at least the country collects some additional revenue, in the process. This CAN be beneficial in four ways:

First: They protect US Companies from Foreign Competition

Second: Increased Job Growth

Third: Higher Government Revenue

Fourth: Favorable Trade Negotiations

RECIPROCAL TARIFFS.
China went on record to “urge the United States to immediately lift tariffs, otherwise they vow retaliation.” Canada said – if we tariff them, they’ll tariff us. Europe is preparing for ‘countermeasures’ to take place, and we’re finding ourselves in a really volatile game to see which country gives in first.

WHEN TARIFFS DON’T WORK:

1828: Tariffs of 49% were implemented to protect US industrial products against competition from foreign imports. This led to the Nullification Crisis of 1832, which resulted in the reduction of tariffs when individual states argued they were unconstitutional.

1930: The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act. The US was in a tough position of The Great Depression, where – unemployment was high and businesses were struggling. Tariffs were placed on goods to make American businesses stronger and prevent competition – but the opposite happened. That meant that people wound up paying more for the same materials than they did before, and – almost 100 years later – the Smoot-Hawley Tariff act was credited as making 1928 worse.

2025: The USA Is in a ‘Trade Deficit,’ the largest tariffs have been implemented in almost 200 years. This is causing the stock market to begin selling off.

MY THOUGHTS:

Tariffs CAN be useful in limited, niche situations for protecting certain US products and services – but, on a large scale, it seems like every piece of historical evidence suggests that – they’re a bad idea, they wind up raising prices and having a negative impact – on ALL income groups – and it’s best to allow the free market to do its thing.

HOWEVER, there IS something to be argued about using tariffs as a negotiation tool for more favorable trade deals with the rest of the world, knowing that – we have less to lose than everyone else. But then again: if the rest of the world bands together and refuses to back down – realistically, this is going to get very ugly…very quickly.

I think it’s going to be way more productive to focus on keeping your expenses low, making sure you earn a consistent income, and have a long term approach to the markets. From an investment standpoint, the stock markets best days usually happen during a bear market, when prices are down the most – and that happens after the worst days.

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Mano Kamgang
 

  • @GrahamStephan says:

    -Here is a link containing the source material for each piece of research cited. I do my best to make my videos as accurate as I can, and the additional resources should help anyone who wants to look into them further – enjoy! https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1lLJkteJXiIrMCW5W_TQOxqHQfygDfazThcKTxsX3oeg/edit?usp=sharing
    -Go to our sponsor: https://surfshark.com/graham and use code GRAHAM to get an 4 extra months for free!

    • @michelestrada says:

      Hi Graham, how updated are your YouTube academy course? Also is it for any kind of channel or only real state ? I’m interested but I do more Fitness.

    • @twoandhalfbengals says:

      stock was over inflated via democrats anyways.. you don’t really want to live in a fake bubble lol.. government prints money and invest into housing market. Not a great idea. reset means crappy companies that can’t make it crash and ones that do it right thrive creating healthy competition.

    • @jdm8220 says:

      Hey fix ur intro

    • @williampisano7573 says:

      Did you say thank you 🙏 graham?

    • @Greyarea606 says:

      Thought this was you coming out?

  • @DevenTalks says:

    Don’t worry guys I’ll fix this

  • @TribeTheDemon says:

    The tariffs were calculated based on deficit not tariffs from other countries

  • @christianmandujano189 says:

    Graham: “Buy low!”
    Me: “With what!”

    • @GrahamStephan says:

      ….

    • @ethansleepybear says:

      @@GrahamStephan Its a fair comment but Trump also has said “The stock market isnt for everyone” so I mean thats his stated expectation. Do with that what you will over the next 4 years. Maybe 8 if he gets his way xD

    • @dan4500 says:

      If you have 0 money why are you worried about the market?

    • @mitchbandalan9450 says:

      Damn… So true…. Especially those who were fired recently….

    • @frolie3207 says:

      @@GrahamStephan thanks for making us laugh, man! I’ve caught that at the beginning. And chuckled immediately.😂😂😂😂

  • @hawkeytown says:

    The largest single day drop…. YET!

    • @tylernathan7985 says:

      Keep going!

    • @richardgomez5008 says:

      President Trump responds “It is Biden’s fault!”
      “Shouldn’t have happened!”
      “Buy a Tesla and suck on plastic straws!”
      😂😂😂😂😂
      🙈🇺🇸🙈

    • @John-t6c2q says:

      @@richardgomez5008 what is Biden’s fault Biden didn’t do anything and anyway we had this with Biden. We had this with Trump the first time during Covid and we had this during Obama Obama was the worst ever in my opinion this is because he’s getting stuff done and the market is reacting to it. It’s OK the market is it’s OK for the market to react like this once in a while it always comes back up.

    • @richardgomez5008 says:

      @John-t6c2q  🤫🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣it’s not go away. The Market is dropping.
      🙂🙂🙂
      🙈🇺🇸🙈

    • @powerplantkitchen says:

      @@John-t6c2q I think he was being sarcastic

  • @JeffRevell says:

    It has been factually established through information furnished by the government that these tariffs were not reciprocal at all. The formula they used was basically based on the trade deficit for each country. The biggest problem with this is that it doesn’t take into account things like the size of the country or what they export. Vietnam was slapped with a 46% tariff due in large part to the fact that they export $150B to the US while the US only exports about $13B to Vietnam. Therefor the difference in the deficit is $137B. The issue is that Vietnam has a population that is only 1/3 of the US so how are they supposed to import at the same levels that the US does. While there is probably some need to adjust trade, it’s the demand on the US side for inexpensive products that drives this deficit, not unfair trade practices. The US loves cheap clothing and spends billions on it. There isn’t going to be a boom in cheap clothing manufacturing in the US due to these ridiculously high tariffs. All it will do is make purchasing affordable clothing more expensive. So basically, we get “taxed” more for the things that we used to be able to afford. The bottom line is that a tariff is a tax on US citizens. Always has been, always will be.

    • @deriac8365 says:

      Blame no one but the American companies that you purchase your products from. The whole point of this is for people to buy American made goods. If you purchase from American companies who buy and source locally and support your own country, then prices shouldnt actually go up much for you, because those companies have no need to raise prices. The people complaining are the people who are unable to adjust their spending habbits, or the people who decided to take advantage of outsourced products. Sucks for them for not looking at the bigger picture.

    • @jonny-b4954 says:

      Midaswell just save your breath honestly. No convincing MAGA. They simply don’t grasp the complexities. But yeah, what you talked about is obviously one big problem with all of this. Among many others. It’s absurd. They just RAISED TAXES on Americans and half the country cheers. It’s insane. Especially when in reality, this and DOGE cuts are primarily to fund a tax cut for the wealthy. Dude literally fractured US hegemony. It’s over. We will never get it back the way it was. I’m not sure we will recover from 4 years of this insanity.

    • @kgal1298 says:

      Yes I don’t like how he explained this. It also ignores why labor is cheap in other countries and why manufacturing moved there. Anyone care to take a look into why it’s so hard to remove slave labor from the supply chain? I suppose if the US economy crashes and we need to work from penny’s the oligarch class will be able to get cheap labor in the US too.

    • @Freeskier-ox8mu says:

      Haha ur dumb, they will raise American made and sourced products as well to increase profits. If one goes up by 10 the other can go up by 9 and still be cheaper.

    • @aparnarai3708 says:

      @@deriac8365 that’s exactly why American companies would raise prices, due to tariffs all alternatives are more expensive so the companies will raise them enough to profit more. Also, supply will not be able to meet the demand in a few months, it will takes year to produce products on the level US imports them and some cannot even be made(like minerals, ores, etc). You are under the assumption that American companies will not exploit the compulsion of people to only buy American made products, but companies are greedy. Tariffs only work in an ideal condition, in real situations, tariffs just kill international competition and therefore by extension, kill the drive for innovation.

  • @fasteddy3336 says:

    If the American auto makers made a better vehicle, people would be willing to pay extra for it. When you build the vehicle that you wanna make disposable after five years and not last 10 to 15 years, that’s what the US auto makers get.

    • @LouisXenos says:

      Im speaking as a brit here, your cars (other than muscle cars) are quite poor build quality compared to European or Japanese but also we use the term brash to describe them (until tsla came around and is now dying).

    • @thinkbig5438 says:

      It’s not just disposability. We don’t want cars that eat do much gas or need so much space. Many of our cities have historic inner cities. You don’t want to drive a Ram truck through Naples.

    • @Eiad.Alhamed says:

      100%! The problem with American car makers (and American business in general) is that they have an incentive for quarterly profits, which means they NEED to continuously boost short term sales figures by adding a lot of gimmicks and cutting corners to save money. This works for short terms sales but has harmed the reputation of American cars. I bought a Chevrolet 15 years ago and it was the worst decision ever because it kept breaking down. Never again. They need to up their game in order to compete with the Japanese.

    • @ismaelquinones9447 says:

      This also applies to many products. The quality of American products is so low compared to the quality of products of other countries.

    • @UberDurso says:

      @@LouisXenos You’re totally right. I’m an American who drives a Lexus (Japanese) and I’ve had zero issues with the car in the ten years that I’ve owned it. My parents on the other hand, god bless them, have an Audi and Chevy… the accrued costs are ridiculous. At least $5,000 each.

  • @mobilm4l says:

    Well, what makes me an outlier I guess! I am 57 year-old English immigrant, with zero interest in tech or stocks, and yet I am 110% committed to Bitcoin. I would describe myself as an extreme conservative/libertarian. I have been involved in UK politics for some time, and the main thing that drove me to study Bitcoin and ultimately recognize its value to Humanity was the threat posed by an over-weening government, first in the UK and lately in the US also. I regard the CBDC as the final brick in the wall of the totalitarian prison the world’s governments are building for us. And Bitcoin is the ultimate defense against a tyrannical government’s…..I’ve been engaged in active trading and managed to grow a nest egg of around 2.3Bitcoin to a decent 9Bitcoin….I’m especially grateful to Noey Birks, whose deep expertise and traditional trading acumen have been invaluable in this challenging, ever-evolving financial landscape.

  • @JohnHenrySmithJones says:

    We’ve entered the “don’t buy anything other than beans, rice and stocks” stage of the stock market.

  • @chodkowski01 says:

    The largest voting block are seniors and they aren’t investing everyday but instead depend on income from years of savings that are now being wiped out.

  • @rl95719 says:

    “World’s dumbest trade war” is well earned

    • @warrpedd says:

      Americans don’t even buy American. How does Ancient Orange expect other countries to buy it.😂

    • @VotePaineJefferson says:

      Actually, it’s rather brilliant. Don’t be salty because you lost money on dumb tech stocks.

    • @e4e5e2e7 says:

      “brilliant”. Tell me you have no education in economics without telling me. We live in a global economy based on comparative advantage and economies of scale. This forces US manufacturers to pay tariffs every time one of its products many components crosses the border and consumers to take a huge tax hit, which is entirely regressive by nature as with sales tax. 4d chess indeed. Most economically illiterate administration since the Great Depression.

    • @melissagreye8445 says:

      @@VotePaineJefferson It’s not brilliant, people who need their money for retirement are losing a lot . Crashing the American economy is beyond stupid.

    • @Burgerkennedy says:

      You must want China to be the only world power. Sometimes when you remodel an economy, stocks go down a little bit newsflash, stocks go up and down all the time.

  • @e.g.1218 says:

    If I had 50,000 to buy a car I would still buy a Toyota and not an American made car.

  • @TitoTheElephant says:

    When these Tarriffs get pulled back, companies will still charge consumers the new elevated price. Same thing that happened with Covid. Excuse my while I go to Costco and buy toilet paper

  • @maxshiraz3447 says:

    “Liberation Day” liberated a lot of people from their money

  • @kaseychatman6986 says:

    A lot of the people in here voted for this non sense.

    • @kp63 says:

      Ya the majority of the country voted for trump remember? Definitely didn’t vote for this specifically but the democrat party is a domestic terror organization at this point so not much of a choice

  • @Monkey832 says:

    This will be the GREATEST depression. No depression will be greater than mine. The best. The greatest. Terrific. Yuge.

  • @alexk3352 says:

    These tariffs were absolutely NOT calculated based on the tariffs that other countries impose on us. What Trump has on the chart as “tariffs imposed on US” is actually just the trade deficit we have with that country. That is idiotic.

  • @meouby2 says:

    Any influencer can get away with content money by saying something controversial but not the viewer who made mistake after being influence

  • @oas8328 says:

    Keep saying “live below your means” to those already down.

    Congrats. You literally told them to go 6 feet under. Great advice.

    • @zacherybutter7349 says:

      He’s a capitalist. It’s in the programming to see other people as exploitable.

    • @treywingo7817 says:

      I mean what other possible advice is there?

    • @youlovealex says:

      ​@@treywingo7817 If you don’t have useful advice, don’t give advice.

      Recognizing that you can’t help a situation and stepping away is a better thing than giving poor advice.

    • @youlovealex says:

      ​@@treywingo7817
      If you’re already living below your means and you’ve living in poverty, you cannot go any lower.

      I’m sure it’s not conducive to what the channel is going for but I do have a different piece of advice, which is to find community. I could list a ton of ways one could do this that would be beneficial financially, but I’ll let you use your creativity.

    • @mojojoji5493 says:

      @@treywingo7817I hate when rich people say “I don’t know how to help you” to a guy that only needs cash

  • @itsjasonbiitch853 says:

    This guy promoted elon and Trump, he’s to blame for this too, I wouldn’t trust a god damn thing he says

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