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Fitch Tags Trump as Risk to Global Economy

Fitch Tags Trump as  Risk to Global Economy
Fitch Tags Trump as  Risk to Global Economy

Fitch Ratings fired a warning shot Friday about President Donald Trump’s economic policies, saying hard-line stances on trade and immigration pose potentially serious problems for the world.

“The Trump administration represents a risk to international economic conditions and global sovereign credit fundamentals,” the agency said in a statement. “US policy predictability has diminished, with established international communication channels and relationship norms being set aside and raising the prospect of sudden, unanticipated changes in US policies with potential global implications,” CNBC reported.

The most serious implications would involve credit downgrades for sovereign debt.

Fitch does not mention the US specifically being subject to a reduced rating, but listed several of its trading partners that could take a hit should negative conditions emerge from Trump’s saber-rattling on international trade agreements and immigration flows.

Among those that could face the most serious impact are Canada, Germany, China, Japan and Mexico, all of which have been mentioned by Trump or his advisors as benefiting from unfair trade pacts. Fitch warned that as the rhetoric escalates, “the list is unlikely to end there.”

“One interpretation of current events is that, after an early flurry of disruptive change to establish a fundamental reorientation of policy direction and intent, the administration will settle in, embracing a consistent business- and trade-friendly framework that leverages these aspects of its economic program, with favorable international spillovers,” Fitch’s analysts said.

However, Fitch maintains that global credit and economic risks are to the downside, with a “less benign” scenario more likely to emerge, particularly when it comes to trade.

“In short, a lot can change, but the aggressive tone of some administration rhetoric does not portend an easy period of negotiation ahead, nor does it suggest there is much scope for compromise,” the analysts wrote.

The warning comes a day after Fitch said the amount of countries carrying AAA-rated debt has fallen to its lowest level in 14 years. As a percentage of all nations with rated sovereign debt, that is the worst reading ever.

The US maintains its pristine rating, even though Fitch noted that it is “judged to have (relatively) weak public finances.”

On the upside, Fitch said Trump’s plans to cut taxes, slash business regulations and spend on infrastructure are pro-growth.

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