The call changed everything. In minutes, a single conversation between Donald Trump and Vietnam’s To
Lam sent global markets surging and rewrote the script on America’s economic future.
Tariffs threatened to choke trade; instead, Trump says Vietnam is ready to slash them to zero.
Wall Street cheered. Then the jobs report hit—and the real shock bega… Continues…
Trump’s announcement that Vietnam is willing to cut tariffs to zero landed like a thunderclap on Wall Street.
Companies deeply tied to Vietnamese manufacturing, like Nike, saw their shares jump
as investors rushed to price in a world where a looming 46% tariff shock might suddenly vanish.
For Trump’s supporters, it was proof of leverage working: tariffs as a brutal negotiating weapon,
then swiftly holstered when a rival blinks. For critics, it raised a darker question—how much of the economy now swings on a single phone call and a social media post.
Yet, as the trade drama played out, the March jobs numbers offered a more grounded verdict.
Employers added 228,000 jobs, far above expectations, with private-sector hiring powering ahead
even as earlier months were quietly revised down.
Healthcare, transportation, and retail helped drive the gains,
hinting at an economy still surprisingly resilient
. Economists warned that Trump’s tariff gambit could push inflation toward 4%, forcing the Federal Reserve to stay cautious.
But on cable news, voices like Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer celebrated a
booming labor market and a public seemingly
rewarding Trump’s economic brinkmanship.
Between the threat of trade war and the reality of job growth, America’s future now feels balanced on a razor’s edge.