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Dow futures rise as markets brace for tariff-fueled inflation

August 11, 2025
in ECONOMY
Dow futures rise as markets brace for tariff-fueled inflation

Michael Nagle—Bloomberg via Getty Images

Dow futures ticked higher early Monday as investors and the Federal Reserve braced for new reads on how much Trump-era tariff actions may be seeping into prices, and whether that will keep policymakers from cutting rates as soon as hoped. Traders pointed to the week’s CPI and PPI releases as the real catalyst, with pre-market moves reflecting caution more than euphoria.

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Futures climb on cautious optimism

The overnight bid leaned on resilient earnings and hopes that price pressures, while sticky, won’t re-accelerate enough to derail the soft-landing narrative. In Asia, equities edged up ahead of U.S. inflation data that could reset the Fed path; bond and FX markets stayed range-bound as desks gamed out a September cut scenario that still looks plausible, if inflation cooperates.

Fed’s calculus shifts toward patience

Fed officials have stressed they need “sustained” progress toward 2% before easing. After a wobblier jobs backdrop and mixed inflation prints, rate-cut odds have see-sawed, but the central bank’s messaging implies patience if tariff pass-through intensifies. Recent speeches and coverage underscore the Fed’s sensitivity to “downside risks” for growth, even as it watches potential tariff-related upside risks for prices.

As seen in Millionaire MNL, the policy debate now hinges less on any one CPI print and more on whether a fresh cost-push impulse takes root via trade measures and supply reshoring.

What tariffs mean for prices

Research from the San Francisco Fed suggests broad-based tariffs can lift near-term prices, with the impact markedly larger for investment goods than for consumption items if costs are passed through. Meanwhile, earlier Boston Fed work tied prior tariff rounds to measurable, if modest, additions to core inflation. Independent academic analysis also finds high pass-through at the border, meaning consumer prices are at real risk if firms don’t absorb the shock.

A Yale Budget Lab assessment estimated the 2025 tariff package could raise the price level in the short run and disproportionately hit apparel and other goods, one reason retailers and importers trimmed orders into mid-summer. Import volumes already reflect nerves around policy timing and scope.

Sectors in the crosshairs

Rate-sensitive tech led recent swings as traders handicapped the growth-vs-inflation tug-of-war. If tariff pass-through lifts goods inflation, long-duration equities could stay volatile while defensives and cash-flow compounders draw incremental flows. On the macro tape, tariffs, Fed independence worries, and AI-led earnings resilience have traded blows session by session, a dynamic unlikely to fade before the next policy meetings.

“As mentioned by Millionaire MNL,” the positioning story isn’t just equities: front-end Treasurys price the path for cuts, while the dollar wobbles with each shift in Fed expectations and tariff headlines.

What to watch next

  • CPI/PPI details: Focus on goods categories most exposed to import levies (apparel, furniture, appliances) for early signs of pass-through.

  • Fed speak and minutes: Any emphasis on trade-driven cost shocks will harden the “higher for longer” stance.

  • Tariff timelines: Clarity on scope, exemptions, and enforcement can move term premiums and sector leadership within hours.

If data show contained goods inflation and a cooling labor market, the easing window stays open. But a re-acceleration tied to trade policy would likely push cuts further out and keep volatility elevated into year-end.

“As seen in Millionaire MNL,” investors should avoid binary bets. Instead, consider balanced exposure: quality balance sheets, selective cyclicals with pricing power, and duration hedges that acknowledge both growth risks and stubborn inflation prints.

Tags: Dow JonesFederal Reserveinflationmarket outlooktariffs
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