Kevin Hassett just dropped some heavy commentary on executive trade powers. According to him, the administration holds full authority to declare emergencies and regulate trade through tariffs or quotas when threats emerge. His logic? If there's an emergency situation, you need tools to manage trade flows—and tariffs plus quotas are the primary levers available.
What's particularly interesting is his mention of a "backup plan" even if the Supreme Court pushes back on their approach. This suggests they've war-gamed potential legal challenges and have alternative regulatory pathways ready to deploy.
For markets, this kind of policy flexibility creates uncertainty. Tariff adjustments can shift capital flows overnight, impact corporate earnings across sectors, and alter risk appetite for both traditional and digital assets. Worth monitoring how this plays out.
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BlockTalk
· 12h ago
This talk about a backup plan... honestly, it's a bit hard to take. Feels like they're hinting at the worst-case scenario.
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MeaninglessApe
· 12-05 18:47
NGL, Hassett's whole thing just sounds like a way to shift the blame... all that talk about "emergency" and "backup plans," to put it bluntly, it just means they'll do whatever they want.
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ForkTongue
· 12-05 18:45
Starting to play the "state of emergency" card again? To put it bluntly, it's just a way to open a backdoor for themselves to gain trade privileges.
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MrRightClick
· 12-05 18:44
It's the same old "emergency powers" rhetoric, give me a break.
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CryingOldWallet
· 12-05 18:41
Ready... Are you going to pull the emergency powers card again at this critical moment?
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gaslight_gasfeez
· 12-05 18:29
Here we go again. At critical moments, they just declare a "state of emergency"—no matter how they explain it, it always makes sense for them...
Kevin Hassett just dropped some heavy commentary on executive trade powers. According to him, the administration holds full authority to declare emergencies and regulate trade through tariffs or quotas when threats emerge. His logic? If there's an emergency situation, you need tools to manage trade flows—and tariffs plus quotas are the primary levers available.
What's particularly interesting is his mention of a "backup plan" even if the Supreme Court pushes back on their approach. This suggests they've war-gamed potential legal challenges and have alternative regulatory pathways ready to deploy.
For markets, this kind of policy flexibility creates uncertainty. Tariff adjustments can shift capital flows overnight, impact corporate earnings across sectors, and alter risk appetite for both traditional and digital assets. Worth monitoring how this plays out.