| Photo: Getty Images (Christopher Furlong) |
|
|
Good morning, Quartz readers! |
|
Hedge and seek. Top execs at Bridgewater Associates issued a dire warning about the lingering trade war, calling it a “once-in-a-generation” economic shift that raises recession risks. |
|
Brace for impact. Major U.S. airlines are hitting turbulence; they’re ditching their 2025 forecasts as the trade war has created “unprecedented uncertainty” and grounded demand. |
|
Shelf-inflicted wounds. The CEOs of Walmart, Target, and Home Depot privately warned President Donald Trump that his tariffs could mean empty shelves in their stores. |
|
The price is fright. Most Americans now think tariffs will mean higher prices and aren’t happy with how Trump is handling the economy, a recent poll found. |
|
Cash of the titans. Corporate spending on AI remains relatively resilient, analysts say, and is “strategically coveted” and defended among CIOs. |
|
Interest-ing drama. The president continues to attack the Federal Reserve chair — saying Jerome Powell is “making a mistake” on interest rates amid Trump’s promises not to fire him. |
|
U.S. shoppers weren’t just kicking tires in March; they were buying them before tariffs could drive their prices even higher. |
|
According to the Census Bureau, sales of transportation equipment soared 27% last month as Americans raced to buy big-ticket items before the president’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcement. Overall orders for durable goods — think: appliances, machinery, autos, computers, and jewelry — jumped 9.2% in March, beating forecasts and resulting in $315.7 billion in sales. |
|
The Federal Reserve, in its latest Beige Book, reported a particular increase in auto sales that can be “generally attributed to a rush to purchase ahead of tariff-related price increases.” Meaning: Buyers hit the gas to beat any potential sticker shock. |
|
Google just delivered a big first-quarter earnings win. The tech giant’s Q1 results breezed past most of Wall Street’s forecasts, with $90.2 billion in revenue (versus $89.2 billion expected) and $34.5 billion in net income — a 46% year-over-year jump. That puts earnings per share at $2.81, outpacing the $2.01 EPS that analysts expected. |
|
|