- A new acronym is making its rounds on Wall Street: TACO
- “Trump Always Chickens Out” refers to the idea that markets can bet on Trump walking back tariff proposals.
- Investors buying the dip on Trump’s trade war have been handsomely rewarded this year.
First, it was the Trump trade; now it’s TACO. The new meme, first floated by The Financial Times this month, is making the rounds on Wall Street as a blueprint for how to play the stock market in 2025.
What is the TACO trade
It’s an acronym that stands for “Trump Always Chickens Out.”
Simply put, it’s been demonstrated numerous times this year that when the stock market dips sharply on Donald Trump’s trade war proclamations, it inevitably rockets back up when the president backs down.
In other words, when Trump announces new tariff policies, it might be a good time to buy.
A few months into Trump’s presidency, there are several examples of the TACO trade at work.
- When Trump issued his sweeping "Liberation Day" tariffs on April 2, the S&P 500 tanked over 12% in the following days. On April 9, Trump announced a 90-day pause, igniting a furious stock rally that included the best day for the S&P 500 in nearly two decades.
- Meanwhile, the index has gained over 1% since mid-May, when the White House announced a framework trade deal with China that lowered tariffs for 90 days. The development helped stocks recover all of their losses since April lows.
- The latest example came just last week after Trump called for a 50% tariff on the European Union starting on June 1. It sparked a slide in the stock market that day, but an abrupt about-face over the weekend from Trump to delay the tariffs until July 9 helped the S&P 500 rebound by nearly 2% on Tuesday as traders returned from Memorial Day.
"I think the only person or entity he listens to is the stock market," Eric Sterner, chief investment officer at Apollon, told Business Insider: "I think that's a big part of his scorecard — what the stock market does."
Why it matters
Trump's election win injected a massive shot of bullish excitement across Wall Street. The subsequent rally in a handful of assets like crypto, Tesla stock, and bank shares was dubbed the Trump trade
The thesis was that owning areas of the market set to benefit from Trump's agenda was a foolproof bet. However, some of those bets soured, mainly because the trade war came to overshadow any lingering optimism about deregulation or other White House priorities.
With TACO, investors have a new guiding principle.
"Buy the Trump tariff dip. Essentially, Trump has proven to investors that he won't actually follow through with draconian tariffs," Tom Essaye of The Sevens Report wrote on Wednesday. "As such, any sell-off following a dramatic tariff threat should be bought."
It's a mentality retail investors have wholly adopted, with recent months seeing dip-buying at historic levels. But how long the TACO trade will remain effective depends on what happens after the tariff delays unwind over the summer, Apollon's Sterner said:
"You can get some short-term gains there," he said, but he also warned that the odds of a damaging US downturn grow if tariffs return with no trade deals to stop them, though this isn't Apollon's base case.
"If this game continues, it will put the US economy into recession at some point, and that's when that game ends in a bad way."