The "Art of the Deal" might be growing tiresome as markets decline following what's now become a predictable walking back of Trump tariff threats.

  • Risk markets sank on Thursday even as the White House walked back its latest tariff threat.

  • Interest rates are rising across the globe, another possible headwind for bitcoin and crypto.

  • Tomorrow's U.S. jobs report has likely taken on added significance.

The latest in a series of reversed tariff threats by President Trump isn't having the hoped-for effect on risk markets at least halfway through the U.S. trading day on Thursday.

The stock market initially bounced off a sharply lower opening and bitcoin (BTC) rose through $91,000 as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick — in an appearance on CNBC — said the president would exempt Mexico from his new 25% tariff for any goods or services covered under a previous trade agreement. The nicer stance toward the country's neighbor to the south was confirmed later by a social media post from Trump.

The positive moves in markets were short-lived though, with the Nasdaq at its session low just past the noon hour on the east cost, down 2.3%. Bitcoin has pulled back to $88,500, down nearly 1% over the past 24 hours.

This just in: Interest rates are soaring globally

Possibly lost in the unending ebb and flow of news emanating out of D.C. is a sharp rise in interest rates across the developed world.

With U.S. military support for Europe possibly on the decline, governments across the continent are pledging budget-busting increases in defense spending. Germany, for instance, this week saw one of its worst bond crashes ever, with the 10-year Bund yield jumping more than 40 basis points to the current 2.83%.

In Japan, where long-term Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yields were little more than a handful basis points for what seemed like decades, the 10-year JGB yield rose another 6 basis points to 1.51% overnight. That's more than double the level of six months ago.

The moves haven't been ignored by U.S. markets. The 10-year Treasury yield — which had previously had declined about 70 basis points since the Trump inauguration — has risen more than 20 basis points in the last 48 hours to 4.30%.

Friday brings the latest U.S. jobs figures

The large gains in interest rates brings a renewed importance to the February U.S. Nonfarm Payrolls Report to be released Friday morning.

$BIO

Economists are expecting payrolls to have risen 160,000 versus 143,000 in January. The unemployment rate is seen remaining steady at 4%. A strong print — and employment reports have tended to run ahead of expectations for many months running — could send rates pumping even higher, and risk markets, crypto among them, into a new leg down.#TrumpCongressSpeech #WhiteHouseCryptoSummit