We have deliberately waited a few days before commenting on “Liberation Day” and the fallout that would come from President Trump’s new tariffs regime.It will go down as just another historical period of heightened volatility, uncertainty, risk, and a whole manner of market turmoil. This is why we wanted to put what is happening right now into some context. (If that is possible, considering how volatile the period is and how erratic and how quick the president's manner can change.)US markets have seen this kind of violent move only three times since the 1950s. The S&P’s over 10 per cent drop in the final two sessions of the week following President Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff announcement has it in rare company – and not in a good way - October 1987 (Black Monday), November 2008 (Global Financial Crisis), March 2020 (COVID-19).So, why such a reaction?The market reaction reflects not the ‘shock’ but the scale and brevity of the tariffs. A 10% across-the-board tariff was broadly expected. There were some calculations as much as 15 to 20% judging by the net $1 trillion in and out of the federal government revenue. (This is the impact of DOGE and other government spending cuts coupled with the tariffs now in place that will offset the promised 0% personal income tax for those earning up to US$150,000)But what markets didn’t see coming was the country-specific layer. Take China as an example; the additional 34% reciprocal tariff on Chinese goods pushed the total to 54%. With other measures factored in, the effective burden could approach 65%.Then there were the tariffs that were tied to trade deficits, hitting Japan, South Korea and most emerging markets between the eyes (i.e. Vietnam).The EU saw a 20% rate, which was within expectations, while the UK, Australia, New Zealand and others landed at 10%. Canada and Mexico were spared, as was Russia, North Korea and Belarus, interestingly enough.Energy was excluded, which is unsurprising considering Trump’s goal of getting energy down, down and staying down. Pharmaceuticals and semiconductors were also carved out, however, this is more down to the probability of more targeted action like that of steel and aluminium.Now, what is different about this market shock and risk off trading is that it would send funds flowing to the US dollar, ratcheting it higher. But not this time. The dollar weakened against the euro. Theories as to why range from Europe’s lighter tariff load to euro-based investors pulling money out of the US. The same could be said of the Swiss Franc.All this leads to an average effective tariff rate of around 22%. That number will likely climb once product-specific tariffs on areas like pharmaceuticals and lumber are formalised. Some of this may be negotiated down, but not soon, and the possibility of tit-for-tat retaliation like China has now entered into could actually see it going higher still as the President looks to outdo country responses.The broader uncertainty this introduces to the US outlook is now at its highest since early 2020 and has the markets pricing in 110 basis points of Fed rate cuts this year – a near 5 cut call shows just how unprecedented this is.In fact, in no time in living memory has a developed economy lifted trade barriers this aggressively or abruptly. What has been implemented is textbook economics 101 supply-side shock.Input costs go up, finished goods get pricier, and the ripple effects hit margins and employment. Expect to see this in the next six months.Expect core PCE inflation to finish the year at 3.5% —nearly a full percentage point higher than the consensus forecast from just a week ago.Real GDP growth is forecast to slow to 0.1% on a quarter-on-quarter basis. That path may be volatile as Q1 could look worse due to soft consumption and strong imports, with a mechanical bounce in Q2.What has been lost in the chaos of last Thursday and Friday’s trade was the March Non-farm payrolls jobs print came in at 228,000, which was above consensus, the caveat being it is less so after downward revisions to prior months.Hospitality hiring was strong, likely helped by a weather rebound that won’t repeat. Government payrolls are holding steady for now, but cuts are coming. Layoffs in defence and aerospace (DOGE) are already underway, and tariffs will act as a brake on new hiring. Expect softer reports ahead.Unemployment ticked up slightly to 4.15%, reflecting a modest rise in participation. That’s still within range, giving the Fed cover to hold off on immediate action. But if job losses build pressure on the Fed to act, it will increase quickly.The consensus now is for the first rate cut of this cycle to start in May, triggered by softer April payrolls and earlier signs of deterioration in jobless claims and business sentiment.Zooming out from just a US-centric point of view, the macro standpoint is just as bad if not worse. The scale of tariffs adds pressure on industrial production, trade volumes and cross-border investment.That’s feeding into commodity markets, where the outlook has turned more cautious.Brent is expected to fall into the low US$60s as trade frictions and oversupply build. LNG looks weaker too, with soft Asian demand and less urgency in Europe to restock. Iron ore is more exposed to China, and the reciprocal tariffs put a vulnerability into the price due to the broader global slowdown and higher prices to the US.Looking at China specifically, infrastructure remains a key policy lever that would offset the possible loss of demand in aluminium, copper, and steel. Monetary indicators are beginning to turn, suggesting the start of a new easing cycle. It also suggests that policy remains inward-facing, and a focus on domestic stability would mean a metals-heavy growth path. Thus suggesting Australia could be the ‘lucky country’ once more and could escape the full burden of the global upheaval.In short, the global reaction isn’t just about tariffs. It’s about what happens when policy shocks collide with already-fragile global demand, and central banks are forced to navigate inflation that’s driven by politics, not just price cycles.This is the question for traders and investors alike over the coming period.
포트폴리오 자산 가격을 제한할 메인 구조적 팩터
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차량 인도 실적 및 유휴 누적 재고 소화 속도: 테슬라의 2분기 차량 인도량 실적은 480,126대를 기록하며, 전 분기 누적되었던 재고 물량 중 약 28,000대를 성공적으로 소화해 냈습니다. 핵심 관전 포인트는 이 오더 규모를 채우기 위해 가혹한 단가 인하 및 마진 잠식을 치렀는지 여부입니다. 탄소배출권(Regulatory Credits) 거래 효과를 배제한 가공 순수 오토모티브 매출총이익률의 방어선인 17% 기준선 안착 여부가 수급의 최대 분수령입니다.
실무 모니터링: 탄소배출권 제외 순수 자동차 gross margin의 17% 분계선 사수 여부 -
메가팩(Megapack) 배터리 인프라 출하 대주기: 2분기 메가팩 배터리 인프라 출하 총량은 전년 동기 대비 40% 폭발적 성장을 기록한 13.5 GWh로 도출되었습니다. 이는 기관 최종 예상치 상단인 13.8 GWh를 소폭 미달하는 Facts이나, 에너지 저장 사업부 고유의 영업마진율이 자동차 부문의 둔화세를 유의미하게 상쇄해 줄 완충 버퍼가 될 수 있습니다.
선행 시그널: 에너지 저장 사업부 마진율 및 분기 손익계산서 기여도 -
자율주행 플랫폼 서사와 FSD 유료화 독점력: 테슬라의 주가 밸류에이션 해자는 차량 제조의 일차원적 한계 수치를 넘어 오직 인공지능(AI) 플랫폼 자율주행 고도화 드라이브에 종속되어 기동합니다. 소프트웨어 구독 매출 성장 가속도, 자율주행(FSD) 상용 침투율 및 로보택시(Cybercab), 휴머노이드(Optimus) 프로그램의 공식 상업화 로드맵 시점이 핵심 변수입니다.
실무 모니터링: FSD 유료 채택률 및 소프트웨어 라이선싱 통상 진행 진척도 -
연산 클러스터 확충 자본 지출 스파이크: 생성형 AI 모델 트레이닝 클러스터 확충 및 공장 기계 설비 캐파 가동률 정상화를 위한 연간 자본 지출(CapEx) 가이드라인 목표치가 미화 250억 달러 이상으로 대폭 증액 마킹되었습니다. 이로 인해 주당 잉여현금흐름(FCF) 지표는 연말까지 순수 수축(마이너스) 채널을 유지할 확률이 커졌으며, 소프트웨어 상용화의 마진 포획 능력이 멀티플 사수의 절대적 전제 조건으로 청구됩니다.
포지션 타깃: 잉여현금흐름(FCF) 포워드 전망 및 자본 지출 자본 효율성 점검
주당순이익(EPS) 미화 0.45달러 초과 달성 | 에너지 저장 마진 개선 및 FSD 상용 침투율 가속화
탄소배출권 효과를 배제한 순수 자동차 Gross Margin 지표가 18% 선을 전격 상방 사수해 냅니다. 메가팩 순이익률이 컨센서스를 상회하며, 경영진이 로보택시(Cybercab) 양산 개시 타임라인과 관련해 정량 Facts 기반의 무결점 로드맵을 선언하는 국면입니다.
예상 수급 경로: 마진 둔화 우려를 잠재우고 자율주행 상업화 마일스톤에 대한 확신을 안착시킬 경우, 주가 배수의 강력한 리프라이싱 숏스퀴즈 모멘텀 유발 유력.주당순이익(EPS) 미화 0.38달러 ~ 0.44달러 밴드 안착 | 마진율의 정형화된 안정세 및 자율주행 로드맵 유지
조정 주당이익 지표가 월가 기관 평균치인 미화 0.42달러선 범위 내에 정확히 안착합니다. 자동차 마진율은 17% 공방선에 유지되고 메가팩 공급 추이 역시 통계적 시즌 경로를 이행합니다. 시장은 당장의 장부 숫자가 아닌 중장기 플랫폼 서사 연속성 확인에 무게를 두게 됩니다.
예상 수급 경로: 지표 발표 직후 단기 가격표는 박스권 횡보를 소화할 가능성이 크며, 스마트 머니의 시선은 경영진 기자회견 내 가이드라인 수위로 전격 이동.주당순이익(EPS) 미화 0.35달러 하회 하락 | 매출총이익률 잠식 및 자율주행 프로그램 상용화 시점 후행 지연
차량 인도 대금 할인이 전개되며 오토모티브 Gross Margin이 16%선 밑으로 대폭 추락합니다. 고강도 AI 인프라 자본 지출 대비 소프트웨어 유료 회수율 Facts가 미달하면서 주당 FCF 현금 소모(Cash Burn) 과열 우려가 장세를 압박하는 국면입니다.
예상 수급 경로: 이익 해자와 현금 유동성 방어력에 균열 시그널이 낙수효과로 전가되면서 외국인 패시브 자본의 즉각적 청산 이탈 및 거친 장중 매물 출회 격발 위험.







