Friday, President Trump announced a plan to raise tariffs — at one point threatening 100 percent duties — in retaliation for Beijing’s new controls on rare earth exports, sparking global market jitters. Background: China introduced tighter export rules that U.S. officials say could choke supplies of minerals and components critical for semiconductors, EVs and defense equipment.
China publicly pushed back, calling the move justifiable and warning it will take “corresponding measures,” a stance that suggests a durable escalation rather than a quick retreat. The initial standoff sent Asian markets lower and forced companies to reassess supply‑chain risk and inventory plans ahead of the holiday season.
Why it matters: disruptions to rare‑earth and advanced‑materials flows raise costs for manufacturers and could feed through to consumer prices; retailers and industrials face the prospect of higher input bills just as holiday buying ramps up, increasing the risk of renewed inflation pressure.
What to monitor: whether the White House follows through on an effective Nov. 1 tariff start date and whether Beijing narrows or extends export curbs — those moves determine how persistent supply shocks will be and whether central banks must factor new inflation upside into policy decisions.