Goldman Sachs expects a recession if tariffs take effect on Wednesday

1 week ago 10

Trump holding a board with reciprocal tariffs

Goldman Sachs has already raised its recession probability from 35% to 45%. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
  • Goldman Sachs is warning of a recession if President Donald Trump's tariffs take effect Wednesday.
  • The tariffs, ranging from 10% to 50%, have faced widespread criticism for potential global harm.
  • Goldman has raised its recession probability from 35% to 45% even before the tariffs come into force.

If President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs go into effect on Wednesday, Goldman Sachs says the US could be pushed into a recession.

"We expect to change our forecast to a recession," a team of analysts at the banking giant said in a Sunday note.

The analysts based this forecast on Trump's tariffs coming into effect on April 9, which they say would raise the effective tariff rate by 20 percentage points, even taking into account the US striking deals with some countries.

Last week, Trump announced substantial tariffs on imports into the US, ranging from 10% to 50%. Economists were fast to criticize the move, with one calling them "monstrously destructive."

Europe's most senior central banker, ECB chief Christine Lagarde, said their effects would be "negative the world over."

In their note, Goldman analysts said the bank has increased its 12-month recession probability from 35% to 45%. This follows what they described as a "sharp tightening in financial conditions, foreign consumer boycotts, and a continued spike in policy uncertainty that is likely to depress capital spending by more than we had previously assumed."

The forecast is based on Goldman Sachs' assumption of a 15% rise in US tariff rates — still lower than the 20% rate that was unveiled.

If the tariffs come into force later this week, even if some countries do make agreements with the US, the bank is expecting a recession.

"The scale of the "Liberation Day" tariffs exceeded expectations, and the arbitrary way they were calibrated was a major shock and creates a significant credibility issue which is just as unsettling to global markets as the action itself," analysts at Deutsche Bank said in a note on Monday.

"A US Administration that doubles down will have immense global implications for 2025 and the years and decades ahead.

"At the moment there are few signs they are backing down which will likely signal more market turmoil ahead. Rarely if ever have the next few days been so important."

Olu Sonola, the head of US economic research at Fitch Ratings, concurred in a note on April 2.

"This is a game changer, not only for the US economy but for the global economy. Many countries will likely end up in a recession.

"You can throw most forecasts out the door, if this tariff rate stays on for an extended period of time," he said.

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