Because U.S. tariff levels are likely to remain stable regardless of legal challenges, the more critical factor for the long-term outlook is how companies adapt. Investors should focus on corporate responses in capital spending and supply chain adjustments rather than the tariff levels themselves.
Instead of immediately passing tariff costs to consumers, US corporations are initially absorbing the shock. They are mitigating the impact by reducing labor costs and accepting lower profitability, which explains the lag between tariff implementation and broad consumer inflation.
The current trade friction is part of a larger, long-term bipartisan U.S. strategy of "competitive confrontation." This involves not just tariffs but also significant domestic investment, like the CHIPS Act, to build resilient supply chains and reduce reliance on China for critical industries, a trend expected to persist across administrations.
Given that trade policy can shift unpredictably, rushing to execute multi-year supply chain changes is a high-risk move. According to Flexport's CEO, staying calm and doing nothing can be a radical but wise action until the policy environment stabilizes and provides more clarity.
Businesses respond to the uncertainty of trade policy by adopting an "efficiency mindset." Rather than hiring, which carries risks in an uncertain environment, firms are making "no regrets" investments in automation and efficiency. These improvements provide benefits regardless of future tariff levels, making them a safer bet than expanding payroll.
Even if the Supreme Court rules against the administration, it may not change U.S. tariff levels. The executive branch has alternative legal authorities, like Section 301, that it can use to maintain the same tariffs, making a court defeat less of a market-moving event than it appears.
Stocks most affected by tariffs showed a muted reaction to a pending Supreme Court decision. This suggests investors believe the executive branch could use other authorities to maintain tariffs and that any potential refunds from an overturn would take years to materialize, diminishing the news's immediate market impact.
Despite fears from announced tariffs, the actual implemented tariff rate on U.S. imports is only 10.1%, not the computed 17-18%. This is due to exemptions, trade deals, and behavioral changes by companies. This gap between rhetoric and reality explains the unexpectedly strong 2025 performance of emerging markets.
The inflationary impact of tariffs is appearing slower than economists expected. Companies are hesitating to be the first to raise prices, fearing being publicly called out by politicians and losing customers to competitors who are waiting out the trade policy uncertainty.
The economic impact of tariffs is not an immediate, one-time price adjustment. Instead, Boston Fed President Collins characterizes it as a "long one-off" process where the full effect can take months or even a year to filter through the economy. This prolonged adjustment period extends uncertainty and complicates inflation forecasting.
Tariffs on foreign steel don't simply allow buyers to switch to domestic suppliers. A manufacturer of oil industry parts explained that most domestic mills aren't geared for their specific needs or quality requirements (e.g., heat treating). This reveals how tariffs create complex availability and quality challenges, not just simple price increases.