Goldman Sachs now “expect the Trump administration to implement a reciprocal tariff on the EU worth 15 percentage points, raising the total effective tariff rate on the EU by 20ppt (vs. 7ppt before) since the start of 2025”.
- They estimate that inflation will be higher, “driven mostly by EU retaliation, and raise core inflation forecast to 2.1% in 2025Q4 (compared to 2% before)”. Further out, they see “risks skewed to the downside as the mechanical effects of retaliation drop out and modestly negative effects from lower demand dominate”.
- They conclude by noting that “a Taylor rule that looks through the mechanical effect on inflation suggests that the ECB should lower the deposit facility rate further in our new baseline compared to our previous tariff assumptions. Our new tariff baseline therefore reinforces our expectation that the ECB will cut rates in both April and June, and we now forecast a further 25bp cut in July for a terminal rate of 1.75% (vs. 2.00% before)”.