Audio By Carbonatix
A billionaire backer of Donald Trump has urged the US president to pause his recently announced trade tariffs, or risk "a self-induced, economic nuclear winter".
Amid market turmoil, hedge fund manager Bill Ackman said the president should take three months to allow countries to renegotiate their trading relationships with the US.
On Monday, Mr Ackman's warning was echoed by other prominent Wall Street figures, with JPMorgan Chase chairman Jamie Dimon saying that Trump's tariffs risked pushing up prices for Americans.
Despite the shockwaves, the American president is moving ahead, with the White House rushing to label a rumour he might put new tariffs on pause as "fake news".
The rumour on Monday morning that Trump was considering a 90-day pause briefly lifted a swiftly sinking stock market after it was reported on financial network CNBC.
The White House almost immediately shot down the report, showing Trump's commitment to his new import taxes. Stock prices largely stabilised afterward.
The "baseline" tariffs of 10% on most countries' goods that Trump announced last week have already gone into effect, while the higher "reciprocal" rates he wants to impose on the "worst offenders" are expected later this week.
Some countries are seeking to negotiate lower rates with the White House.
The new tariffs, added to steep levies Trump has already put on goods from Canada and Mexico, as well as all automobile imports, are worrying business and economic leaders that they will push up prices for American consumers and spark a global trade war.
The head of BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, said on Monday that the tariffs will raise prices and possibly inflation, and contribute to an economic downturn, according to media reports.
"Most CEOs I talk to would say we are probably in a recession right now," Larry Fink, the firm's CEO, told a meeting of the Economic Club of New York.
Goldman Sachs on Sunday said there is a 45% probability of the US entering a recession within the year, after estimating a 35% probability a week ago, before Trump unveiled his tariff plans at an event called "Liberation Day".
Trump says the import taxes will boost his country with new jobs and investment.
He defended them on Sunday, telling reporters aboard Air Force One that "sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something".
In his post on X on Sunday, Mr Ackman acknowledged the Trump argument that the global trade system had "disadvantaged" the US.
But, he wrote, tariffs that Trump had imposed were "massive and disproportionate", and did not distinguish between American friends and enemies.
Mr Ackman, the billionaire founder of Pershing Square hedge fund management company, became a high-profile supporter of Trump, a Republican, in July 2024.
He had previously backed the rival Democratic Party, and his intervention was seen as an important electoral endorsement from the world of business.
The "reciprocal" rates from the Trump administration, which can reach up to 50%, will be levied on some important manufacturing centres in Asia.
Numerous countries have vowed to respond, and China has already retaliated with new tariffs of its own on goods imported from the US. Trump on Monday threatened to put an additional 50% tariff on goods from the country, which would bring the total taxes he intends to charge to more than 100%.
Trump had launched an "economic war against the whole world at once" that risked shattering investor confidence in the US, Mr Ackman commented.
Mr Ackman said the American leader now had "an opportunity to call a 90-day time out, negotiate and resolve unfair asymmetric tariff deals, and induce trillions of dollars of new investment in our country".
His post on Sunday indicated that he felt the ball was back in Trump's court - after an earlier message on X which urged leaders of other countries to "pick up the phone" to make a deal with Trump.
As stock markets around the world continuedtheir slump on Monday, the head of banking giant JPMorgan Chase offered his own take, warning of "many uncertainties" around the new tariffs policy.
In a letter to shareholders, Mr Dimon said the tariffs will "likely increase inflation and are causing many to consider a greater probability of a recession".
"The quicker this issue is resolved, the better because some of the negative effects increase cumulatively over time and would be hard to reverse," he wrote.
Trump's officials have downplayed the recession risk. The baseline 10% tariff is already in effect, with the higher rates faced by some countries due to come into effect on Wednesday.
Speaking aboard the presidential plane on a flight back to Washington DC on Sunday, Trump himself said European and Asian countries were "dying to make a deal".
Latest Stories
-
Nothing stops OSP from pursuing Ghana case despite Ofori-Atta’s permanent residency request – Tuah-Yeboah
33 seconds -
Thousands of Ghanaian pupils attend schools near toxic sites, study finds
38 seconds -
Say not to single life
10 minutes -
Accra Institute of Technology matriculates students for 2025/2026 academic year
15 minutes -
Foresters demand arrest and prosecution after violent attack on Babatokuma Forestry Commission checkpoint
18 minutes -
GoldBod, Armed Forces and Forestry Commission launch national land reclamation project
18 minutes -
Ghana Boundary Commission launches African Border Day activities with water project in Bawku West
27 minutes -
Mfantsiman Old Girls’ Association to hold nationwide health walk on June 27
28 minutes -
Ghana, Burkina Faso launch fresh push to reaffirm shared border
37 minutes -
Ghana urged to use data science, AI to solve Ghana’s perennial flooding problem
37 minutes -
Musk’s SpaceX buys AI coding start-up for $60bn days after IPO
47 minutes -
Sandy Asare celebrates God’s grace in new single ‘Ɛyɛ Awurade’
57 minutes -
NPP failed Afari Hospital project despite 8 years in power – Kennedy Agyapong
60 minutes -
Fidelity Bank donates GH¢1m to Black Stars World Cup Fund
1 hour -
PURC, Works and Housing Ministry push major water sector reforms to improve service delivery
1 hour