
April 3, 2025
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
Commodities, Interest Rates Collapse After President Trump’s Reciprocal Tariffs Announcement. Didn’t Democrats Say Prices Were Supposed To Go Up?

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Commodities prices and interest rates collapsed across the board following President Donald Trump’s April 2 announcement of reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trade partners despite Congressional Democrats’ predictions that inflation would increase as a result of the tariffs. Crude oil went from $72.22 prior to the announcement down to $66.12 per barrel as of this writing, a 8.4 percent decrease. Hot rolled coil steel’s June contracts went from $822 to $817 per short ton, a 0.6 percent decrease. Wheat went from 540’0 cents per bushel to 539’0, a 0.2 percent decrease. Corn started at 458’4 cents per bushel, dropped very significantly to 450’4, but has recovered to 460’4, a slight 0.4 percent increase, relatively unchanged. Gold went from $3,133.30 an ounce down to $3,069.80, a 2 percent decrease. Silver went from $34.64 an ounce down to $32.11, a 7.3 percent decrease. Live cattle from 207.35 cents per pound down to $205.67, a 0.8 percent decrease. Soybeans went from 1025’0 cents per bushel down to 1007’4, a 1.7 percent decrease. It’s across the board for the most part. There are some exceptions. Natural gas, for which demand including for electricity remains high, edged up slightly from $4.076 per MMBtu to $4.146, a 1.7 percent increase. But we can see the overall trend is actually lower prices, not higher prices. The reaction to tariffs is not to buy and bid up commodities, increasing inflation, it’s the opposite which is to sell them. Keep that in mind. And it is happening to interest rates — another very reliable gauge of inflation expectations — with 10-year treasuries dropped from 4.2 percent to 4.01 percent. 2-year treasuries did the same thing, falling from 3.91 percent prior to the announcement down to 3.72 percent. All this is the exact opposite of what Democrats were predicting would happen as a result of the tariffs. |
ALG Thanks President Trump For Levying Reciprocal Tariffs On U.S. Trade Partners

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Americans for Limited Government Executive Director Robert Romano: “Thank you, President Trump, for putting America first and finally once and for all levying the same tariffs on trade partners that they have levied mercilessly on the United States for decades. This was not an easy decision to make, but one that is long overdue with a record $1.2 trillion trade in goods deficit in 2024 after the failed rule of former President Joe Biden. For too long, the world was taking advantage of America, dumping their products here as our factories were outsourced and our industrial base was hollowed out, hurting working families and endangering our national and economic security, all the while presidents and Congresses did nothing to respond. Under President Trump’s leadership, America will be the industrial and technology leader of the world, with commitments for hundreds of billions of investments in the United States. For countries that want to avoid the tariffs, it’s simple: Build in America.” |
Commodities, Interest Rates Collapse After President Trump’s Reciprocal Tariffs Announcement. Didn’t Democrats Say Prices Were Supposed To Go Up?

By Robert Romano
Commodities prices and interest rates collapsed across the board following President Donald Trump’s April 2 announcement of reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trade partners despite Congressional Democrats’ predictions that inflation would increase as a result of the tariffs.
Crude oil went from $72.22 prior to the announcement down to $66.12 per barrel as of this writing, a 8.4 percent decrease.
Hot rolled coil steel’s June contracts went from $822 to $817 per short ton, a 0.6 percent decrease.
Wheat went from 540’0 cents per bushel to 539’0, a 0.2 percent decrease.
Corn started at 458’4 cents per bushel, dropped very significantly to 450’4, but has recovered to 460’4, a slight 0.4 percent increase, relatively unchanged.
Gold went from $3,133.30 an ounce down to $3,069.80, a 2 percent decrease.
Silver went from $34.64 an ounce down to $32.11, a 7.3 percent decrease.
Live cattle from 207.35 cents per pound down to $205.67, a 0.8 percent decrease.
Soybeans went from 1025’0 cents per bushel down to 1007’4, a 1.7 percent decrease.
It’s across the board for the most part. There are some exceptions. Natural gas, for which demand including for electricity remains high, edged up slightly from $4.076 per MMBtu to $4.146, a 1.7 percent increase.
But we can see the overall trend is actually lower prices, not higher prices. The reaction to tariffs is not to buy and bid up commodities, increasing inflation, it’s the opposite which is to sell them. Keep that in mind.
And it is happening to interest rates — another very reliable gauge of inflation expectations — with 10-year treasuries dropped from 4.2 percent to 4.01 percent. 2-year treasuries did the same thing, falling from 3.91 percent prior to the announcement down to 3.72 percent.
All this is the exact opposite of what Democrats were predicting would happen as a result of the tariffs.
On just March 2, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) boldly predicted, “President Trump’s tariffs are going to raise prices on families by as much as $1,200 per year.”
On March 11, just yesterday, Schumer declared, “inflation has gone up under Donald Trump, from groceries to retail to cars.” (See below: Both groceries and cars didn’t experience any price increases in February, the first full month of Trump’s presidency.)
On Feb. 1, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) similarly suggested that prices would go up, stating, “The tariffs imposed by the administration and strongly supported by House Republicans will not lower the high cost of living for everyday Americans. Instead, it will likely do the exact opposite and make life more expensive.”
On March 3, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) also projected price hikes, saying, “Donald Trump promised on ‘Day 1’ to lower costs, but instead working families now have to worry about giant corporations using his haphazard tariff announcements as an excuse to raise prices – and the Trump Administration has no plan to stop it.”
None of it was true, though. In February, consumer inflation dropped from 3 percent annualized in January to 2.8 percent, according to the latest data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Now, with commodities and interest rates and therefore future inflation expectations dropping, what does everyone think will happen with inflation going forward?
Generally, trade partners will certainly respond in kind and besides tariffs, another way to guarantee that outcome is to weaken their currencies — so-called currency manipulation — in order to boost exports to the United States.
China is already doing it again. In mid-March the exchange rate of the yuan to the dollar was .1383, now it’s down .1376, not much but that is a 0.5 percent depreciation.
Other trade partners will eventually follow suit, especially if their export economies suffer in the short term under the weight of the tariffs. Their economy will slow down and they’ll weaken their currencies in response to get a boost. Bet on it.
That will make the U.S. dollar stronger ultimately.
And prices will go down thanks to the inverse relationship between the dollar and commodities, too, with a strong dollar correlating with lower commodities prices and a weak dollar correlating to higher commodities prices.

Asset prices are dropping for equities and cryptocurrencies, too. When money is withdrawn from assets whether it be stocks, crypto or commodities and put into bonds, prices go down!
This has generally been true historically, too. For example, the Great Depression is often wrongly blamed on tariffs. It’s wrong, the issues had to do with competitive currency devaluations as economies came off the interwar gold standard, but let’s roll with the hypothesis. The problem in the Great Depression wasn’t inflation, it was deflation. Prices were falling.
So, do tariffs cause inflation or deflation? Myopic pundits might try to dissemble and say both. They should make up their minds.
The answer is actually neither. As Milton Friedman always taught “inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon…” or an increase in the money supply beyond production. Tariffs neither cause nor prevent money printing. Central banks do that all by themselves.
Maybe what’s really happening is whatever negative news there happens to be, investors and their mouthpieces will just ascribe that to tariffs. But good luck changing people’s expectations from what they’ve been spoon-fed for three months.
The American people were told prices would go up with tariffs — and they’re going down. Who could have foreseen such a likely outcome?
Robert Romano is the Executive Director of Americans for Limited Government Foundation.
To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2025/04/commodities-interest-rates-collapse-after-president-trumps-reciprocal-tariffs-announcement-didnt-democrats-say-prices-were-supposed-to-go-up/
Cartoon: The French Connection
By A.F. Branco

Click here for a higher level resolution version.
To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2025/04/cartoon-the-french-connection/

ALG Thanks President Trump For Levying Reciprocal Tariffs On U.S. Trade Partners
April 2, 2025, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government Executive Director Robert Romano today issued the following statement in support of President Donald Trump’s executive order levying reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trade partners:
“Thank you, President Trump, for putting America first and finally once and for all levying the same tariffs on trade partners that they have levied mercilessly on the United States for decades. This was not an easy decision to make, but one that is long overdue with a record $1.2 trillion trade in goods deficit in 2024 after the failed rule of former President Joe Biden. For too long, the world was taking advantage of America, dumping their products here as our factories were outsourced and our industrial base was hollowed out, hurting working families and endangering our national and economic security, all the while presidents and Congresses did nothing to respond.
“Under President Trump’s leadership, America will be the industrial and technology leader of the world, with commitments for hundreds of billions of investments in the United States. For countries that want to avoid the tariffs, it’s simple: Build in America.
“Today, our leaders would never have had the moral courage to abolish slavery as they have looked the other way for years as we rewarded abhorrent labor practices by buying the slave-made goods. Forcing American companies to compete with countries with far lower wages and sometimes child and forced labor is not only unfair, it is immoral. But it has been allowed to be perpetuated under the false allure of profits. Until now. Thank you again, President Trump, for your leadership in restoring reciprocity in trade and for having the courage that all of our other leaders have lacked.”
To view online: https://getliberty.org/2025/04/alg-thanks-president-trump-for-levying-reciprocal-tariffs-on-u-s-trade-partners/