There’s a brand new commerce on Wall Avenue: the TACO commerce, standing for “Trump Always Chickens Out.”

The time period was coined by Robert Armstrong, a author for the Monetary Occasions, and is meant to seize how markets have fallen on Trump’s vow to impose steep tariffs on imports to the US after which bounce again up when Trump broadcasts pauses on these tariffs.

Most not too long ago, Trump on Friday vowed to impose a 50 p.c tariff on items from the European Union, inflicting markets to fall.

On Sunday, he stated he had a very good name with European Fee President Ursula von der Leyen, and that he was giving the EU till July 9 to achieve a cope with the U.S.

Markets reacted positively to that information Tuesday: The Dow Jones was up 721 factors, or 1.73 p.c, as of two:30 p.m. EDT Tuesday. Markets had been closed within the U.S. on Monday for Memorial Day.

Shares beforehand gyrated when Trump introduced his “Liberation Day” tariffs in April, falling precipitously till Trump stated these tariffs would even be on maintain.

Markets rose additional when the president stated he would decrease tariffs on China after initially warning of triple-digit tariffs.

The development has turn out to be so pronounced, that monetary analysts upfront are warning that Trump’s tariff threats shouldn’t be taken as gospel.

“The TACO trade engages once again,” acknowledged the headline on Monday’s episode of the “Saxo Market Call” podcast, as markets all over the world reacted favorably to the EU pause.

“It’s a new week and we have the latest example of what an FT columnist has called the TACO trade engaging once again: Trump Always Chickens Out,” the podcast description reads. “In this case, it was Trump’s announcement late yesterday to delay the threat to slap 50% tariffs on the EU already to July 9 rather than June 1 (which he threatened on Friday).”