Taking us to the cliff – the psychology behind Trump’s tactics
Some of this adaptation included leaning on Trump’s need to admire, or a kind of language that has not been heard before in diplomatic discussions.
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NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte’s president of the President Iran and Israel to use the F-bomba to describe the wrong behavior of Trump’a referred to Trump as the world’s “father ..
And he studied a treatment. Trump’s response was to Rutte, “I think he likes me. If he doesn’t, I will let you know. I will go back and I will hit him hard, okay?
Trump used the same tactics in the trade agreements we will see at an auction – he never explains what the right price or the right result looks.
The markets learned to download Trump’s Ambit positions and acknowledged that he tended to take us to the cliff before he returned.
They seem to be dosed with the governor collectively-especially in April, excessive fear-based volatility cannot iron.
President Donald Trump met NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.Credit: AP
In April, Trump, such as investment houses Mega, was busy imagining new abbreviations for trade or a reference to the investment flow away from Europe.
Fafo (around the FK and learning) was frequently heard by Reuters in the commercial desk conversations of the financial market to describe the volatility and chaos created by Trump’s policy -making process.
Analogy, such as capturing a Langırt machine, was another who made a lot of money during Trump’s early policy tremors.
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A few months ago, however, investment bank bosses and financial protection fund titans predicted financial Armagedon became silent. Short sellers retreated to lick their wounds.
None of this means saying that the rest of Trump’s term will not end with shocks, or that their policies will have a negative impact on the US and other world economies.
Economists remain careful about slowing down growth and the potential of Trump’s tariffs to re-prevent inflation-both of all of them can explode the current market euphoria.
But world leaders and markets adapt to Trump’s game book – they learn the rate of dilution of the first policy to the final agreement.
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