The Embarrassing Truth About Tariffs Why is Trump so upset about Federal Reserve economic research into his trade policies?
The White House this week opened a new front in its war on the Federal Reserve: a fight about Fed research on the consequences of President Trump’s tariffs. If the tariffs are such an unambiguous economic and political winner, why is the Administration so defensive about them?
The flap concerns the analysis we told you about last week by four economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. They found that American households and businesses are bearing nearly 90% of the cost of the Trump tariffs, contrary to Mr. Trump’s claim that foreigners will pay.
Clearly the White House is worried that voters might conclude this research aligns with their own experience. Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, took to CNBC Wednesday to pan the New York Fed research as “the worst paper I’ve ever seen in the history of the Federal Reserve System” and suggested the people who wrote and published it should be “disciplined.” Disciplined how? Put in stocks? For a tariff paper?
The Fed analysis aligns with other research into the distribution of tariff costs from Harvard economists and Germany’s Kiel Institute—and with common sense. There isn’t widespread evidence that foreign producers are cutting their prices to offset the tariffs, the main mechanism by which foreigners would “pay” for the border taxes.
Nor is the dollar strengthening, which is the other possible mechanism for making foreigners pay (we’ll spare you the equations). Instead the tariffs are causing an increase in post-tariff prices of those goods that are still imported, alongside a modest decrease in the volume of imports. Americans pay higher prices, or “pay” in the form of less choice.
In his more honest moments, Mr. Trump admits this is the effect, if not the intention, of his tariffs. That’s what he meant when he said last year that Americans may have to buy fewer dolls for their children as a result of his trade policies. The handful of economists who support his tariffs believe the border taxes rebalance the global economy specifically by deterring American consumption.
The Fed research and similar papers try to put some numbers on these phenomena. The serious kernel of Mr. Hassett’s complaint, to the extent there is one, is that the New York Fed economists overlooked a wide range of other ways the tariffs could affect the U.S. economy, such as stimulating reshoring of production and an increase in domestic wages.
But such an analysis also probably wouldn’t flatter the Trump tariffs. So far the manufacturing boom Mr. Trump promised hasn’t appeared, as manufacturing jobs are down over the last year. The New York Fed and other research on cost distribution shows one reason why: To the extent American companies eat some of the costs of tariffs, that’s less cash available for investment and hiring.
The Trump economy has been as healthy as it is despite the tariffs, not because of them. The market response to his April 2025 “liberation” tariffs was so negative that the President quickly withdrew them and negotiated lower tariffs as part of “trade deals” that may turn out to be partly illusory. He has also laced the tariffs with multiple exemptions. A dollop of tax reform, a big dose of deregulation and an AI investment boom are allowing the economy to cope with the tariff distortions and uncertainty.
The attack on the Fed over this research is a symptom of the political problem the White House is encountering from tariffs. Thirteen months into Mr. Trump’s term and with elections looming, opinion polls show voters remain worried about the economy. This implies they don’t see a payoff from the tariffs (other than what they’re paying at the store).
Mr. Trump’s ire at current Fed Chairman Jerome Powell increased the more Mr. Powell warned that tariffs might raise prices. The Administration may be trying to warn Kevin Warsh, Mr. Trump’s nominee to replace Mr. Powell, away from a similar approach.
Here’s a better idea: If your tariff policy is so unpopular that you have to bully the central bank into not talking about it, maybe it’s time for a new policy.
WMT yesterday:
prices are rising on imported items and prices overall are still significantly elevated compared with the pandemic period, he said. In the U.S., Walmart prices for groceries grew less than 1% in the most recent quarter, while prices for general merchandise items rose 3.2%, a higher jump than the preceding quarter. Walmart expects similar price movements for the current quarter, in part due to the cost of higher tariffs, said Rainey.
Bank of America internal data:
Tariff payments per small business client were up 142% YoY in January on a 3-month moving average. And a recent analysis from the NY Fed found that US import prices for goods subject to the average tariff increased by 11% more than those for goods not subject to tariffs – underscoring that US firms and consumers continue to bear the economic impact of the high tariffs imposed in 2025.
- America Imported a Record Amount Last Year Despite Seismic Trade Policy Changes December trade deficit surged, capping turbulent year after tariffs
Imports to the U.S. grew to a record high in 2025, leaving the trade deficit little changed despite steep Trump administration tariffs aimed at closing trade gaps.
The nation’s trade deficit—the gap between imports and exports in both goods and services—was $901.5 billion last year, slightly smaller than the $903.5 billion deficit recorded in 2024, the Commerce Department said Thursday. The small change shows America’s role as a heavy net importer remains intact, at least thus far, despite seismic policy shifts during the year.
There were big swings in trade patterns along the way, however, including an early-year surge in imports as companies tried to get ahead of new tariffs. That surge rapidly reversed after some of the tariffs were rolled back and businesses adjusted to the new trade regime.
Overall, imports last year were $4.334 trillion, up about 5% from the prior record of $4.136 trillion in 2024. Exports were $3.432 trillion, up about 6% year over year.
Goods imports for 2025 totaled $3.44 trillion last year, about 4% greater than in 2024.
The trade deficit in goods last year rose to a record $1.241 trillion, up from $1.215 trillion in 2024.
(Bloomberg)
- On Thursday, Walmart also said consumers continue to spend cautiously, especially low-income shoppers. In the U.S., its largest business by revenue and profit, profit margins grew thanks to grocery sales, membership through its Walmart Plus program and advertising sales. But that growth was offset by slower sales growth in general merchandise, a dynamic that reflects shoppers giving priority to their spending needs. (BB)
Private-Credit Warning Signs Flash After Blue Owl Unloads $1.4 Billion in Assets The sale raises fears that the industry’s efforts to court individual investors will suffer
Wall Street has been eagerly selling private credit as a hot opportunity for individual investors. That sales pitch just got tougher.
Blue Owl Capital, a poster child for the industry, said it is liquidating $1.4 billion in assets to raise money to pay out individuals who bought into some of its funds in their heyday but now want to get out. The firm hoped the sale would shore up wobbling investor confidence.
Instead, the opposite happened. Stocks across the private-fund industry slid as the deal raised questions about how much fund managers can count on individuals to stay invested in hard-to-sell assets for the long term.
Blue Owl’s stock dropped 10% at one point Thursday and closing down nearly 6%. Shares of other private-credit titans also sank, with Apollo Global Management and Blackstone both falling about 5%.
“Right now it’s reducing confidence and reducing what anyone is willing to pay for these stocks or assets,” said Evercore Senior Research Analyst Glenn Schorr.
Private-credit funds use client money to make loans, largely to junk-rated companies, earning hefty interest payments that are handed out to investors through dividends. Stocks of these fund managers soared in recent years, in part on optimism that they could raise trillions of dollars from individual investors. That is already happening through funds targeting wealthy investors, like the Blue Owl one that is under pressure. And the industry is taking steps to make private fund investments available through 401(k) savings plans.
But the Blue Owl sale adds to a growing body of evidence of a disconnect between fund managers and individual investors. In private credit, firms buy harder-to-sell assets for longer periods of time, with the understanding their clients will be willing to stomach some turbulence in the middle. Retail investors, however, are accustomed to trading out of investments whenever they choose.
There are other signs that individuals are souring, including a jump in redemption requests at the end of 2025. More worrying to stock analysts: the flow of new investments that were expected to fuel future earnings growth is also slowing.
Inflows to “semiliquid” business development companies, or BDCs, that Blue Owl and others have sold aggressively to wealthy individuals dropped an average 15% over the last three months, according to research by Fitch Ratings. Monthly inflows to the largest such fund, which is managed by Blackstone, dropped to $600 million in January from $1.1 billion in November.
Fund managers say inflows still far outweigh redemption requests, reflecting pent-up demand from wealthy individuals, most of whom still don’t own much private-credit.
“If headlines stay bad and retail keeps reading them, we can expect more headwinds on flows into these funds,” said Ben Budish, a stock analyst at Barclays covering fund managers. (…)
More recently, Blue Owl sold loans held in three of its BDCs to large pension funds and insurance companies for 99.7 cents on the dollar. (…)
“They sold 30% of the portfolio at par and that’s great,” Evercore’s Schorr said. “But it also made people doubt and wonder what the rest of the portfolio in the fund is worth.”
This blog has been warning about private credit since last October.
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Give Them Credit! (October 3, 2025) highlighted the First Brands collapse could well be the first of many corporate accidents.
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Credit and Freedom (January 2, 2026) with Chris Whalen warning that Cracks Widen in US Credit, that the economy may not be as solid as many think:
The growing number of individual and corporate insolvencies are part of a rebound of a long-term trend of falling defaults. For more than a decade, total bankruptcy filings fell steadily, from a high of nearly 1.6 million in September 2010 to a low of 380,634 in June 2022. Total filings have increased each quarter since then, but like loan default rates, they remain far lower than historical highs.
Like credit metrics, the statistical measures of default reflect a growing tendency for negotiation rather than formal events of default. Some estimates suggest that 1 out of three insolvencies are restructured out of court. (…)
One way to measure the stress building in private equity and credit is the poor performance of lenders to private businesses. Long-term equity returns for business development companies (BDCs) have been hammered since the middle of 2025 (…) “Short sellers are taking note of rising signs of stress within the private credit market, and using publicly traded BDCs to signal that outlook,” (…)
PIK or “Payment-in-Kind” refers to a mystical financial arrangement where interest or dividends are paid with additional securities, goods, or services instead of cash, allowing companies to conserve cash flow but increasing debt principal. PIK is commonly seen in high-risk sectors like leveraged buyouts and venture debt, with examples including PIK Notes and PIK Interest. But there are literally thousands of private equity financed companies now using PIK to avoid default.
Income from payment-in-kind debt, which allows borrowers to defer interest and can signal an inability to pay with cash, has been rising across BDCs, reaching 7.9% in the third quarter, according to data from Raymond James. In the third quarter, 3.6% of investments across BDCs were on non-accrual status, a designation that indicates a lender expects losses, Raymond James data show.
Like REITs, BDCs are pass through vehicles that must pay out most income. “BDCs still accrue the PIK loan coupons as non-cash income, but lack the corresponding cash to pay the required dividends, to maintain their favored IRS treatment,” NDP notes further. “If they lose that tax treatment, there is risk that such PIK loan coupons become taxable at the BDC level, rather than treated as simply passed through to BDC shareholders for taxation. Then, the BDCs would lack the cash to pay the IRS, too.” (…)
We expect to see a growing number of BDCs, private equity sponsors and other parties forced to recognize asset impairments and related losses in the New Year. The backlog of private equity companies using PIK or other means to avoid bankruptcy is going to be cleared out substantially as it becomes clear that merely lowering short term interest rates will not make moribund PE companies attractive to investors. (…)
Lend More Upon Default (LMUD) has concealed the scope of the disaster and even pushed down reported loan default rates, but we suspect that 2026 earnings results will see the benign trend in bank credit defaults come to an end.
Classic! Too much money always, always results in speculative behavior, more so when people forget that economic cycles are actually not dead. Seeking higher returns, investors drift away from basic investment discipline and/or over-concentrate to one sector.
Greedy underwriters are quick to sniff it, leading to weak underwriting, limited transparency, limited due diligence, and loose covenants. Investors find comfort in “packages” forgetting, as Jim Chanos put it, that “We rarely get to see how the sausage is made.”
The mix and quality of risk now matter more than the quantity of risk one takes. In our view, 2026 should be a year to upgrade portfolios rather than stretch for yield, including moving up in quality where we can, locking in fixed-rate income where it is still adequately compensated, and leaning into collateral-backed structures that offer both contractual cash flows and protection in downside scenarios. (KKR)
Maybe you missed the last part of my February 18 post:
The share of private equity-backed companies that deferred cash interest payments ticked higher for a third consecutive quarter, pointing to growing signs of stress, Rene Ismail reports.
Data from valuation firm Lincoln International show that 11% of fourth-quarter borrowers paid interest in-kind, which is when creditors are given more debt in lieu of cash. More than 58% of those loans featured so-called “bad PIK,” meaning that borrowers opted to delay interest payments during the life of the loan versus when the debt was originated. Lincoln analyzed more than 7,000 companies during the fourth quarter.

“Companies we flagged as having bad PIK went from roughly 40/60 debt-to-equity, which is reasonable, to about 76% debt today — that’s a sign of stress,” said Ron Kahn, global co-head of valuations and opinions at Lincoln, which has data going back to the fourth quarter of 2021.
Bad PIK was in 6.4% of private loans last quarter, up from 6.1% in the three months prior and substantially higher than the 2.5% ratio recorded in the last three months of 2021.
And don’t presume this is limited to private credit.
The backlog of unsold companies in private equity is monumental. As the FT notes: “Private equity firms sell assets to themselves at record rate.” This will not end well. And the end may begin in 2026 as private equity companies fail in growing numbers.
The strong rally in silver and gold, and the weakness of crypto tokens, are leading the decline in US fortunes when it comes to the equity markets. Literally dozens of crypto ventures have failed in the past year, notes Comsure. Crypto exchange collapses have led to $30–50 billion in investor losses, the UK consultancy reports. But the greater concern is the mounting backlog of corporate insolvencies, a real and growing danger that could push the US into recession even as short-term interest rates fall.
As I wrote on January 2:
This right when the US government is taking several regulatory and executive actions to “democratize” access to private equity and private credit for retail and retirement investors.
Among many measures, the SEC is exploring changes to the “accredited investor” definition to focus more on investor sophistication rather than strictly wealth or income criteria.
How will the SEC objectively measure sophistication?
Sophistication is not intelligence, and certainly not judgement (remember LTCM).
Wealth and income are much better measures of one’s ability to weather investment losses than sophistication. This is what the “accredited investor” definition was for.
In today’s WSJ:
The Trouble With Public Access to Private Markets Small investors are unlikely to know what they’re doing—and the effect on public markets would be undesirable.
(…) In this challenging environment, “alternative” managers have begun looking at small investors as a potential solution. Their money is seen as fuel for growth and, perhaps more important, as exit money to satisfy the clamor of current investors who want out.
President Trump (in an August executive order) and the Securities and Exchange Commission have endorsed opening private markets to small investors. But there are pitfalls beyond the obvious problem that small investors may not know what they are doing. One is the effect on public markets.
The number of U.S. public companies exceeded 7,000 in 1997. Today’s total is less than half that and falling. Hamilton Lane reported in 2022 that only 13% of U.S. firms with more than $100 million in sales were public, leaving 18,000 companies out of reach to small investors. Letting small investors into private funds would address this situation, but it could turn out badly for investors and the market.
Most small and intermediate-size companies can be accessed only through exorbitant fees such as the “2 and 20” for venture funds and the multilayer fees for funds of funds. And what will be in it for investors? Will Wall Street share the best private deals with the public or keep them for itself and favored customers?
To broaden access to private markets, we should first restore public markets for small and medium-size companies so that all investors have an array of public and private choices. To do this, we must remove the disincentives that keep smaller companies from going public:
• Congress has interfered with public-company CEO compensation, which has led to a reliance on options and fostered semi-privatization through massive stock repurchases.
• Public-company CEOs have been burdened with unreasonable legal liabilities such as personal responsibility for the accuracy of even the minutest details in all financial statements.
• The costs of issuing public stock and regulatory compliance have become too high for any but giant companies to bear.
• Quarterly reporting and Wall Street demands for immediate “good numbers” have encouraged a short-term perspective, which may foreclose important long-term investments and thinking.
• Because so much stock investing has morphed into index investing, new public companies, which are unlikely to join an index, become orphaned. Having more public companies won’t help this situation, which requires new thinking to solve.
If I were at the SEC, I would be asking: Is it a good idea for small investors to be concentrated in a limited number of giant companies through index funds that are weighted by capitalization and that buy regardless of price? Will exchange-traded funds hold up during the next extended bear market? Their liquidity hasn’t been tested. Are investor funds safe with the few brokerages that dominate the small-investor market? Will Securities Investor Protection Corp. insurance provide enough protection?
The small investor is perennially at risk. As Malcolm Bryan, president of the Atlanta Fed in the late 1950s, said: “We should have the decency to say to the money saver, ‘Hold still, Little Fish! All we intend to do is to gut you.’ ”
But a president aggressively deregulating crypto markets won’t be bothered discussing regulations for small investor protection.
FYI: Crypto exchange collapses have led to $30–50 billion in investor losses
Globally, the crypto and virtual asset industry has seen significant defaults and bankruptcies, both among exchanges and token projects.
- Out of nearly 7 million cryptocurrencies listed since 2021, 3.7 million have failed (i.e., stopped trading or were abandoned).
- 52.7% of all crypto projects have failed, with 1.8 million failures in Q1 2025 alone.
Reasons for Token Failures:
- Lack of utility or use case
- Poor security (e.g., hacks)
- Rug pulls and scams
- Market volatility and regulatory pressure
Total Estimated Cost to Investors:
- Exchange-related losses: Over $30 billion
- Token project losses: Difficult to quantify precisely, but likely tens of billions more, especially from retail investors in failed ICOs, meme coins, and DeFi scams.
Based on the most comprehensive data available, the total estimated global investor losses from failed crypto exchanges and token projects are well over $2 trillion.
Comsure, a business risk advisory service, wrote the above last September 24. Bitcoin peaked at $124,310 on October 7. It’s now $67,530. Some people are silently crying … and praying.
US Poses Greater Security Threat Than China, Canadians Say in Poll
More than half of Canadians say the US currently poses the greatest threat to their country’s security, a stark indicator of how wide the perceived rift has become between the historically close allies.
A survey conducted by Nanos Research Group for Bloomberg News found 55% of respondents believed the US poses the most risk to Canada’s security of any country. Some 15% of respondents said China was the greatest threat, followed by 14% who pointed to Russia.
The poll was taken from Jan. 31 to Feb. 4, shortly after US President Donald Trump made a series of threats against Greenland, publicly complained about NATO and said he would be prepared to increase tariffs further on Canada. (…)
Trump’s tariffs have also pushed Canada closer to China. The two countries agreed on a deal to lower tariffs on Chinese electric cars and Canadian food products. His government is also seeking Chinese joint-venture auto investment — an unthinkable step before Trump returned to the White House.
