According to recent remarks from a Federal Reserve official, tariff pass-through effects have been materializing slower than initially anticipated. This observation carries significant implications for market participants.
When tariffs are implemented, economists typically model how quickly these costs filter through the economy—whether businesses absorb them or pass them along to consumers. The gap between expected and actual pass-through suggests either stronger business pricing power, consumer resilience, or alternative supply chain adjustments happening in real time.
For those tracking macro policy and its ripple effects across asset classes, this signals that near-term inflation pressures may be more muted than projected. Softer inflation readings could influence Fed policy trajectory, which directly impacts liquidity conditions and investor risk appetite across traditional and digital asset markets.
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LiquidityHunter
· 01-16 18:45
The key is where the liquidity gap is; this arbitrage opportunity will be eaten up.
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ser_we_are_ngmi
· 01-16 09:51
Huh? The Federal Reserve has changed its stance again? The key phrase is "slower than expected," brother.
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GigaBrainAnon
· 01-14 19:26
Tariff transmission isn't that fast? Now the Fed will have to come up with a new plan again.
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0xSherlock
· 01-14 17:41
The key is whether companies are really lowering prices, I'm skeptical.
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TooScaredToSell
· 01-14 17:40
The key is whether companies are really lowering prices or just secretly pocketing the difference.
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ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 01-14 17:35
Is tariff transmission not as fast as expected? Uh... are companies really bearing the costs?
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GweiTooHigh
· 01-14 17:35
Hmm... So tariffs don't transmit that quickly, and companies are forced to absorb the costs? I didn't expect this move.
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SandwichDetector
· 01-14 17:33
Tariffs don't transmit that quickly, this logic is quite interesting
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SigmaBrain
· 01-14 17:21
The key is whether companies are truly absorbing the costs or just playing word games.
According to recent remarks from a Federal Reserve official, tariff pass-through effects have been materializing slower than initially anticipated. This observation carries significant implications for market participants.
When tariffs are implemented, economists typically model how quickly these costs filter through the economy—whether businesses absorb them or pass them along to consumers. The gap between expected and actual pass-through suggests either stronger business pricing power, consumer resilience, or alternative supply chain adjustments happening in real time.
For those tracking macro policy and its ripple effects across asset classes, this signals that near-term inflation pressures may be more muted than projected. Softer inflation readings could influence Fed policy trajectory, which directly impacts liquidity conditions and investor risk appetite across traditional and digital asset markets.