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Trump’s tendency to back off of his most extreme threats recently inspired a Financial Times writer to coin the phrase “ Taco ...
Wells Fargo's Christopher Harvey thinks a 10% tariff could be split evenly between importers, corporations, and consumers.
There’s a new trade on Wall Street: the “TACO trade,” standing for “Trump Always Chickens Out.” The term was coined by Robert ...
Investors are beginning to realize that Trump never follows through on his tariff threats, inspiring the TACO trade: 'Trump ...
The acronym, TACO, stands for “Trump Always Chickens Out” and was reportedly coined by a Financial Times columnist, according ...
Wall Street loves a catchy acronym, and the “TACO trade” has captured the mood, as investors and analysts attempt to make ...
This maxim has been abbreviated to TACO, which stands for Trump Always Chickens Out. It's a market-oriented spin on the ...
The tongue-in-cheek term describes the pattern in which markets tumble after President Donald Trump makes tariff threats, ...
Robert Armstrong, US Financial Commentator for the Financial Times and Charlotte Howard, Executive Editor for The Economist ...
Ongoing US-China trade tensions and volatile policy shifts have left investors caught between betting on tariff deescalations ...
Robert Armstrong, US Financial Commentator for the Financial Times and Charlotte Howard, Executive Editor for The Economist ...