Investment Strategies
Trump's Tariff Broadsides: Now Mexico's Turn - Wealth Managers React

Investors were taken by surprise a few days ago when President Trump threatened tariffs against Mexico, citing immigration issues as a reason. Here are wealth management reactions.
Anyone who thought that President Donald Trump’s tariff
enthusiasm ended with China got a rude awakening a few days ago
when he tweeted a threat to slap taxes on Mexican exports as a
way to force the US’s southern neighbour to halt the flow of
illegal immigrants. Whatever the specific rights and wrongs of
the immigration issue, investors who had already tried to price
in the effect of US-China tariffs have another headwind to think
about. And Trump may not be done yet: the European Union could be
singled out for treatment, particularly because of complaints
about its persistent trade surplus in products such as German
autos. (In a separate but arguably related development, the US
has added Singapore and Malaysia to its list of
jurisdictions which it
watches because of their forex policy. Both countries have
defended their systems.)
What to make of the latest tariff noises? Here is a selection of
comments from wealth managers.
David Bailin, chief investment officer, Citi Private
Bank, writing in the firm’s mid-year review.
The threat by the US to impose tariffs on all imports from Mexico
unless the latter helps to curb illegal immigration into the US
is an alarming development. President Trump also said the US
would no longer designate India as a “developing country”,
thereby ending many Indian exporters’ exemption from US tariffs.
The President may next turn his focus to the unresolved
US-European Union trade dispute.
The potential effects are numerous. Rising costs from tariffs
will only be partly passed on to consumers, squeezing profit
margins on those goods. Declining sales volumes will then follow.
Capital investment could suffer even though companies are forced
to spend to reconfigure their supply chains to secure the flow of
vital inputs. Global companies accustomed to largely unfettered
international trade may find themselves facing barriers they have
not encountered for decades. Smaller firms – which cannot build
inventories as readily nor have as much financial flexibility –
will be even more vulnerable.
We believe that global financial markets have yet to price fully
all of the possible outcomes of the trade war. The likelihood of
a negative resolution has clearly risen of late.
Claudia Calich, fund manager at M&G
Investments
The threat of new tariffs (5 per cent on June 10, then an
additional 5 per cent on the first day of every month up to 25
per cent on October 1), if imposed, is likely to be materially
negative for Mexican asset prices.
For context, 5 per cent tariffs are higher than before NAFTA
(used to be 4 per cent) and also higher than average WTO tariffs
(average c. 2.5 per cent). In light of the above, 25 per cent
tariffs would be extremely punitive for Mexico’s exports to the
US (80 per cent of total exports). In addition, the White House
so far has announced that tariffs would be uniform, i.e. all
imports being impacted. If this is the case, then virtually all
joint production units between the US and Mexico will be hit and,
in particular, the auto sector where a lot of products go back
and forth in both countries. One way to solve the value chain
issue (best case scenario) would be to delay the
tariffs.
One may also argue that Trump might end up facing a domestic
issue if US original equipment manufacturers get impacted.
However, there is also a negative scenario where tariffs go ahead
on June 10 because Mexico does not reduce the number of crossings
to Mexico at its Southern border in the next seven days. In this
case, there may be multiple implementation issues at the
US-Mexico border and Mexico may have no other choice than taking
retaliatory actions to preserve its competitiveness (like
imposing tariffs on grain imports from the US). If duties
remained for a long time, that would probably mean the end of
NAFTA and USMCA.
The impact on the Mexican economy will likely start with higher
uncertainties hitting growth, with Mexico already facing very low
growth to start with. Estimates from various Mexico economists
state impacts on GDP from -0.45 per cent (5 per cent tariffs) to
-1.20 per cent (25 per cent tariffs). Banxico now likely cannot
cut rates and higher risks may only reinforce Banxico’s hawkish
stance with now more probability of a hike if the peso
depreciates further. In terms of fiscal, low growth would in
theory mean more spending to come but given debt levels and
commitment to the 1 per cent primary surplus, the current
administration may not have room to raise spending.
The Peso has depreciated by 3 per cent since the headline: based
on the assumption that any 1 per cent tariffs translate into
50bps of USDMXN, the current 19.75 seems fairly priced for the
first 5 per cent tariffs but we don’t believe this is pricing
full 25 per cent tariffs in October and/or retaliation.
Long positioning is also a source of concern so trade talk
escalation could result in much further depreciation of the peso.
Meetings between officials of both countries in the next few days
will be critical. External debt similarly not pricing the worst
case scenario with a 10-15bps spread widening.
Charles de Quinsonas was last week on a research trip in Mexico
and is comfortable with our exposure in the corporate space
(limited exposure to exports to the US from Mexico in the names
we hold). We remain very cautious about the developments in
Mexico, but we maintain our exposure levels to the country for
now (which are still underweight), on the back of real rates
which remain elevated and our expectation of fundamental
resilience of the corporate bonds we hold.
Maarten Jan Bakkum, senior emerging markets strategist,
NN
Investment Partners
We have had an underweight in Mexican equities since September
2017, partly due to a high risk of further US protectionism. We
also fear the AMLO administration’s interventionist policy
course, with its negative impact on business confidence and
corporate capital expenditure and a high risk of a widening
government budget deficit.
The Mexican government has said it will not retaliate before
starting discussions with the US. Delegations from both countries
will meet for talks tomorrow in Washington, DC, but US officials
have stated that Trump is likely to stand firm. For the
government of Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO), this is a major
test.
AMLO knows the country is very dependent on exports to the US –
85 per cent of its exports go to its large neighbour,
representing 30% of GDP – but he was elected on an assertive
nationalist platform. The president is faced with a weak economy,
mainly due to private-sector uncertainty about the economic
policy course, which is generally expected to be more
interventionist. Fixed investment growth has been weak because of
this domestic uncertainty, and with trade uncertainty increasing
again, the Mexican economy runs a risk of falling back into a
recession.
The timing of the new tariffs is curious, with Trump’s
announcement coming on the same day that AMLO asked the Mexican
Senate to hold an extraordinary session to ratify USMCA, the new
trade agreement between the US, Mexico and Canada, which should
replace NAFTA. Meanwhile, in the US, approval of USMCA had
already become more uncertain. This new unilateral move by the US
reduces the likelihood of the US Congress passing USMCA in the
foreseeable future.
Investors will have to price growing headwinds to Mexican trade.
The peso is one of the most liquid and freely tradable currencies
in emerging markets, so much of the immediate market impact will
come via the exchange rate. Also, Mexican equities are currently
vulnerable to a correction. The market recently recovered a bit
relative to global emerging markets as investors focused on the
negative growth impact of the escalated US-China trade conflict
on emerging Asia. Mexican bond markets appear less vulnerable, as
more trade headwinds increase the likelihood is that the central
bank will cut interest rates.