【Blockchain Rhythm】 The latest news comes as a bit of a surprise—US January CPI data has been released, with an actual reading of 2.7%, directly contradicting Wall Street’s previous consensus forecast of 3.1%. From this figure, it’s clear that inflationary pressures are indeed easing significantly.
What’s a bit painful about this result is that the market had widely bet that tariffs would significantly push up prices. Starting from spring last year, policy measures kept intensifying, and people expected a new wave of inflation. However, two recent studies from the San Francisco Fed have reversed this expectation—historical data shows that although tariffs sound intimidating, their actual transmission to inflation isn’t as strong as imagined. The reason is quite practical: importers have diluted the effective tariff rate through capacity shifting, guerrilla tactics, negotiating exemptions, and other means. This means tariffs have a more noticeable impact on GDP and employment, but their shock to prices is less than expected.
Looking at specific numbers, tariff revenues are still shrinking. According to Pantheon Macroeconomics, the peak was $34.2 billion in October, then it started to decline—$32.9 billion in November, and further easing to $30.2 billion in December. This month-by-month downward trend is worth paying attention to.
Currently, the average effective US tariff rate is about 12%. Estimates suggest this adds roughly 0.9 percentage points to (PCE) inflation driven by personal consumption expenditures. However, about 0.4 percentage points of this has already been absorbed by the market, meaning the main impact has already passed. This increases the likelihood that core PCE will approach the 2% target within the year.
Another more realistic issue is that the Treasury Secretary previously claimed that tariffs could generate between $500 billion and nearly $1 trillion in revenue, but independent estimates now suggest that by 2025, collections will only reach $261 billion to $288 billion. This gap is quite significant. Currently, the US fiscal year 2026 deficit has already accumulated to $439 billion, and the total national debt has surpassed $38.5 trillion. Against the backdrop of tariff revenues falling short of expectations, the newly proposed large-scale spending plans raise questions about fiscal sustainability. For the crypto market, this evolution warrants ongoing observation—shrinking policy space and potentially increased flexibility for the Federal Reserve could generally be positive for risk assets.
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RugResistant
· 01-09 13:44
wait, tariffs getting priced in differently than expected? analyzed the sf fed research and ngl the dilution mechanics are sus. importers gaming the system with capacity shifts = red flags for gdp hit incoming. soft landing narrative looking fragile rn tbh
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TokenRationEater
· 01-07 19:33
Wow, Wall Street has crashed again? The issue of tariffs isn't that scary after all, the crypto world can finally breathe a sigh of relief.
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SurvivorshipBias
· 01-07 04:12
Oh no, it's another market self-rescue show. Instead of tariffs biting, GDP is taking the hit first...
Wait, isn't that logic even more heartbreaking? Inflation is suppressed, but unemployment is rising?
Wall Street almost had a crash this time, luckily importers "guerrilla" saved the day.
Tariffs are really just paper tigers. Speaking of which, should the crypto market relax now or keep tightening?
CPI looks good, but what about workers' wages? That's the real issue.
So ultimately, cheap things still come from scalp trading...
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BlockchainWorker
· 01-06 15:32
Haha, it's another collective failure on Wall Street. This time, even playing the tariff card didn't achieve the desired effect. Interesting.
Importers are really talented; they can find ways to exploit the system. No wonder inflation hasn't taken off.
Tariffs have an even greater impact on employment? Then retail investors will have to worry again.
It's really just capitalists thinking one way and acting another.
So the crypto world still depends on the Federal Reserve's stance. Policies can reverse unexpectedly.
Something's off. It feels like Wall Street has already digested all the good news in advance.
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AirdropHunterWang
· 01-06 15:29
Another prediction of chopping leeks, uh... this time Wall Street got slapped in the face?
Regarding tariffs, it sounds fierce but the actual punch isn't hard, traders have found a way out.
But what I care about is, how will the coin price move... Is the inflation slowdown a good thing or a bad thing?
Wait, does the reduction in tariffs have any impact on the on-chain ecosystem, or is it purely a US stock market issue?
This pattern feels like the previous "soft landing" script, ultimately it depends on how the Fed makes its move.
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DaisyUnicorn
· 01-06 15:28
Ha, it's another big "wolf coming" show. Wall Street's predictions got slapped in the face by reality, I understand that feeling... The flower of tariffs looks like it can stab people, but in fact importers have long found ways to bypass it. To put it simply, prices haven't surged, but GDP and employment are actually hurting more. How the crypto market will follow up depends on whether the Federal Reserve will continue to cut interest rates.
Is it the same old story? Although tariffs sound harsh, when they actually come into effect, importers start to dodge in all sorts of ways, and in the end, the ones who suffer are employment and GDP... This soft landing was indeed a bit unexpected, but don't celebrate too early.
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TeaTimeTrader
· 01-06 15:18
Damn, Wall Street has been proven wrong again. This time, they predicted a decrease of only 0.4%?
Such a large expectation gap, it seems the market psychology plan needs to be restructured.
Tariffs are not as effective in pushing up prices as imagined; importers are already looking for ways to dodge them. Interesting.
If soft landing of inflation is achieved, should the Federal Reserve's rate cut expectations also be adjusted?
How much benefit can the crypto market gain from this wave of行情 still depends on the mood of the US stock market.
Once the hard landing expectation disappears, risk assets are done for.
So tariffs ultimately hurt their own people? This logic is a bit ironic.
How does the US inflation "soft landing" exceeding expectations and the shrinking tariff benefits affect the crypto market?
【Blockchain Rhythm】 The latest news comes as a bit of a surprise—US January CPI data has been released, with an actual reading of 2.7%, directly contradicting Wall Street’s previous consensus forecast of 3.1%. From this figure, it’s clear that inflationary pressures are indeed easing significantly.
What’s a bit painful about this result is that the market had widely bet that tariffs would significantly push up prices. Starting from spring last year, policy measures kept intensifying, and people expected a new wave of inflation. However, two recent studies from the San Francisco Fed have reversed this expectation—historical data shows that although tariffs sound intimidating, their actual transmission to inflation isn’t as strong as imagined. The reason is quite practical: importers have diluted the effective tariff rate through capacity shifting, guerrilla tactics, negotiating exemptions, and other means. This means tariffs have a more noticeable impact on GDP and employment, but their shock to prices is less than expected.
Looking at specific numbers, tariff revenues are still shrinking. According to Pantheon Macroeconomics, the peak was $34.2 billion in October, then it started to decline—$32.9 billion in November, and further easing to $30.2 billion in December. This month-by-month downward trend is worth paying attention to.
Currently, the average effective US tariff rate is about 12%. Estimates suggest this adds roughly 0.9 percentage points to (PCE) inflation driven by personal consumption expenditures. However, about 0.4 percentage points of this has already been absorbed by the market, meaning the main impact has already passed. This increases the likelihood that core PCE will approach the 2% target within the year.
Another more realistic issue is that the Treasury Secretary previously claimed that tariffs could generate between $500 billion and nearly $1 trillion in revenue, but independent estimates now suggest that by 2025, collections will only reach $261 billion to $288 billion. This gap is quite significant. Currently, the US fiscal year 2026 deficit has already accumulated to $439 billion, and the total national debt has surpassed $38.5 trillion. Against the backdrop of tariff revenues falling short of expectations, the newly proposed large-scale spending plans raise questions about fiscal sustainability. For the crypto market, this evolution warrants ongoing observation—shrinking policy space and potentially increased flexibility for the Federal Reserve could generally be positive for risk assets.