According to BlockBeats, institutional analysts suggest that the recent U.S. Customs disruption might be more than a mere software glitch. The term "glitch" could be a strategic smokescreen, aimed not at fixing a malfunctioning system but at buying time during a period of high-risk adjustments in global trade and capital flows.

As U.S. President Donald Trump's significant tariff measures cause ripples across global supply chains, the sudden "glitch" has halted tariff data processing. This pause provides key stakeholders, including clearinghouses, freight forwarders, the U.S. Treasury, and Customs, an opportunity to reassess pricing and strategies before any new rates are implemented. It may also serve as a form of information disruption akin to a wartime fog strategy.

By freezing tariff exemption tracking and reducing transparency on who receives exemptions, the U.S. administration and Treasury gain a relatively quiet period—ranging from hours to days—to evaluate market reactions and intervene if necessary, without media exposure of their actions. This can be seen as a preemptive firewall against liquidity crises or geopolitical panic, rather than a system-level failure.