3 Trump Initiatives Beyond Tax Reform That Could Move Markets

 | Dec 07, 2017 02:50AM ET

by Jason Martin

Even as the U.S. Congress and White House rush to put the final rubber stamp on tax reform before the end of the year, and even with a potential government shutdown looming on December 22 (House Republicans introduced a temporary stop-gap spending bill on Monday to fund the government to push back what was initially a December 8 deadline; the measure is expected to be passed by the end of the week), there remain other issues on President Donald Trump’s plate that, though still hovering in the background, could well affect the future path of the American economy and, consequently, stocks.

h2 1. NAFTA Still Unresolved/h2

The North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), adopted in 1994, was intended to create a North American market where goods could move across borders between the U.S., Canada and Mexico tariff-free. As part of his presidential campaign, Trump threatened to withdraw from the accord unless it was made “fairer” for the U.S., claiming that it had dented American manufacturing and caused a $60 billion trade deficit with Mexico.

One of the major sticking points in negotiations has been the U.S. insistence on the rules of origin for the auto industry. The U.S. wants to raise the minimum threshold for sourcing auto production to be 85% from NAFTA members and 50% of the total from the U.S. itself, compared to the current agreement for 62.5% to be sourced from the member countries.

U.S. automakers are actually lobbying against the plan. In a November 27 meeting with Vice President Mike Pence, executives from Ford (NYSE:F), General Motors (NYSE:GM) and Fiat Chrysler (NYSE:FCAU) asked for the idea to be scrapped, arguing that it would add thousands of dollars to car costs in the U.S.

Regardless, ending NAFTA without a deal would imply the return of the World Trade Organization rules on free trade, hiking tariffs between the three countries. There is further speculation that Trump’s “America First” agenda would lead to a hike in tariffs even beyond WTO guidelines, which could be mirrored by retaliatory tariffs from Canada and Mexico.

A November 27 report from the Bank of Montreal calculated that a failure to renegotiate terms would lead to a 0.2 net reduction in real U.S. gross domestic product over the next five years, while Canada would see a 1% decline.

The report further indicated that the U.S. industries to be hardest hit by the lack of a deal would be automotive, as prevailing agreements currently straddle all three economies, followed by textiles with Canada and Mexico accounting for 15% of U.S. manufacturers’ sales.

After negotiations in November failed to resolve any issues, so-called inter-sessional talks are scheduled for the week of December 11 in Washington. Those results would be reported to chief negotiators before a January 23-28 meeting in Montreal, Canada.

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h2 2. $1 Trillion in Infrastructure Policies on Tap/h2

Infrastructure policies have been a part of Trump’s plans since day one of his presidency and his election caused an immediate furor in construction and materials firms, including United States Steel (NYSE:X), Vulcan Materials (NYSE:VMC), Fluor (NYSE:FLR), AECOM (NYSE:ACM), Chicago Bridge & Iron (NYSE:CBI), Jacobs Engineering (NYSE:JEC), and Martin Marietta Materials (NYSE:MLM)—on the back of increased proposals and funds for the sector.