By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and Yoruk Bahceli
NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) -Investors are heading into this week’s trade talks between the U.S. and Chinese leaders with a sense of deja vu, excited by the proclamations of a truce and apprehensive the real deal may offer far less to celebrate.
Stock markets across the world jumped on Monday after U.S. officials said negotiators from both sides had hashed out a framework for agreements for lower U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports and Chinese concessions on rare earth export curbs.
As expectations build for U.S. President Donald Trump to sign that deal with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday and for some respite in the long mercurial relationship between the world’s top two economies, the S&P 500 index rose 1% to hit a record high.
Stock markets in South Korea, Taiwan and Japan, too, notched new highs, while traditional havens such as gold fell in a sign investors were prepared to take more risky bets.
It’s a pattern markets have followed through Trump’s first and now second presidencies, such as during the 2019 trade war with China and after his “Liberation Day” global tariff blitz this year, positioning for Trump to eventually back down after going on the offensive against trade partners.
“We had this big headline, markets sold off, we had some wobbles on that, but now it seems that talks are constructive again and now that’s being faded,” Evelyne Gomez-Liechti, multi-asset strategist at Mizuho, said.
“To be honest whenever we get all these headlines from Trump it also follows this TACO pattern. I feel like this was just the strategy again,” she said. “TACO” – Trump Always Chickens Out – is a Wall Street acronym for the view that the president makes big threats but eventually backs down.
In the past month, stocks fell after Trump threatened to impose additional 100% tariffs on imports from China as well as export controls on critical U.S.-made software, after Beijing tightened its rare earth restrictions.
Repeating the TACO pattern, Chinese stocks have been rising for more than a week in the run-up to the Xi-Trump talks.
Even if the Trump-Xi meeting does not produce a definitive end to their trade war, investors are prepared to buy into any de-escalation in tensions.
“There is not an insignificant number of discretionary fund managers who have been wary given enormous ructions we’ve been seeing to the global trade environment,” said Ross Hutchison, head of euro zone market strategy at Zurich Insurance Group.



