[Bloomberg](
Todayâs Agenda
- Trumpâs truces with China and North Korea [donât go far enough]( yet.
- Runaway [rallies in everything]( may be built on air.
- There are [troubling signs for the labor]( market.
- Demagogues [arenât having such an easy time]( these days.
Truces and Consequences
President Donald Trump just gave us a taste of the benefits of giving peace a chance. Unfortunately, theyâll probably be fleeting, offering little more than theatrics.
Trump this weekend struck a trade truce with Xi Jinping and then had a DMZ kumbaya moment with Kim Jong Un, reviving hope for a deal on North Koreaâs nuclear program. All the warm fuzzies briefly boosted the [S&P 500]( to a new record this morning. The market is right to cheer peace with China, as weâve [argued]( for a year now. In fact, everybody should be less confrontational with China on more than just trade, writes Bloombergâs editorial board: Democrats and Republicans alike act as if China is already an existential foe, but that [risks becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy](. China has issues, for sure, but Trump keeps taking the wrong approach to addressing them, with the tacit approval of even his political rivals. In the process, the editors write, weâve alienated allies and set a bad example for the rest of the world.
Trumpâs unreliability as an ally and negotiator [could thwart a lasting deal with China on intellectual property](, write David Fickling and Anjani Trivedi â even though both sidesâ interests are increasingly in sync. As if to demonstrate his own flakiness, Trump this weekend waved away previous concerns about the national-security risks of Huawei Technologies Co., making it clear [he sees the company as merely a pawn]( in his trade war, writes Tim Culpan. Giving Huawei a free pass to buy U.S. technology may help end the trade war but weakens American credibility, not to mention those national-security threats. So these issues probably wonât die. And anyway, a U.S.-China truce [canât stop the long-term slowing trend]( in global trade, driven largely by tighter bank lending since the crisis, writes Dan Moss.Â
As for North Korea, Trump took a lot of flak for giving Kim a photo op. But thatâs a small price if it actually leads to a real nuclear deal, Bloombergâs editorial board writes. Now [Trump must get out of the way long enough]( to let such a thing happen. This weekendâs events suggest thatâs easier said than done.
Further Diplomacy Reading:
- Trump [throws around Americaâs weight](, but in doing so recklessly, he wastes it. â Hal BrandsÂ
- Iran has [only one reason to want a nuclear program](: to threaten its neighbors with weapons. â Bobby Ghosh
Nice Rally Youâve Got There
The morningâs stock rally faded quickly after [reports]( of slowing global factory activity. After a ridiculous rally in the first half of the year, in which everything from stocks to Bitcoin went hypersonic on promises of central-bank stimulus, reality may be setting in. Mohamed El-Erian warns [thereâs little hope the global economyâs structural issues]( will get settled soon. Itâs a great time for investors to start thinking defensively.
The ugly truth is the global economy is in [a prolonged rut of slowing growth and low inflation](, dependent on constant influx of central-bank stimulus, writes Satyajit Das. This is unsustainable. The system needs a radical overhaul, though the most useful fixes âdebt write-downs, wealth taxes â face powerful resistance.
Further Stimulus Reading: Its time the Fed [decoupled its balance-sheet management]( from monetary policy. â Bill DudleyÂ
The Job Marketâs Sneaky Weakness
In what could be a big moment for the marketâs economic outlook, this Friday weâll get U.S. jobs data for June. Employment still looks strong after the [longest]( economic expansion on record; but at the margins are troubling signs. Gary Shilling notes recent months of [payroll data have been revised sharply downward](, an early indicator of coming weakness. And Barry Ritholtz writes the headline numbers [donât fully account for underemployment](, which is keeping wages low and workers dissatisfied. Thereâs still far too much slack in the labor market.Â
Tough Times for DemagoguesÂ
Trump spent much of the G-20 backslapping demagogues from Kim to Vladimir Putin and Mohammed bin Salman. He even mistakenly [backed up]( a Putin critique of Western liberalism by criticizing Los Angeles and San Francisco. As for Putinâs claim that liberalism is obsolete, [believing it depends on what you mean]( by âliberalism,â writes Pankaj Mishra. If you mean traditional liberal values of freedom and equality, then Putin is wrong. The jury is out on neoliberalism, on the other hand.
Anyway, Trumpâs support aside, demagogues are on a shaky run. In Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan leaned heavily on the scales of Istanbulâs mayoral election and ended up falling flat on his face. Bobby Ghosh suggests the oppositionâs [playbook in this election could offer hints]( to liberals on defeating populists everywhere.
Trump also gushed at the G-20 over Brazilâs Jair Bolsonaro, a dictator in the making to many observers. But Brazilâs democracy seems [surprisingly resilient in the face of Bolsonaroâs authoritarian]( leanings, writes Mac Margolis. Its politics are still a dysfunctional mess, but thereâs hope.Â
Telltale Charts
A new breed of bond ETFs might help investors [close the gap between market yields]( and what traditional bond ETFs offer, writes Brian Chappatta.
Further Reading
The unified theory of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts is that [he favors judicial restraint]( above all else. â Noah FeldmanÂ
New tech platforms make it [possible to trade houses like stocks](. What could possibly go wrong? â Karl SmithÂ
Breaking up Facebook Inc. [wouldnât solve its biggest problems](. Regulation would. â Michael StrainÂ
European leaders are [far too sanguine about AI talent]( being poached by American firms. â Lionel LaurentÂ
Too much of the [world doesnât recycle trash](, or even know why itâs necessary. A Shanghai pilot program could start to change that. â Adam MinterÂ
Kamala Harris and Marianne Williamson are [fitting breakout stars]( of the Democratic debates. â Tyler CowenÂ
ICYMI
Hong Kong [protests escalated quickly](. (And thatâs [bad news for luxury]( brands, notes Andrea Felsted.)
How two college [dropouts made $860 million]( by age 23.
Trouble signs [abound at Deutsche Bank](âs Wall Street headquarters.
Kickers
Why [Chernobylâs plants donât die]( from cancer.Â
Divers find [undisturbed Roman shipwreck]( off Cyprus.
James Dolan should [sell the Knicks](.
Note:Â Please send Knicks tickets and complaints to Mark Gongloff at mgongloff1@bloomberg.net.
New to Bloomberg Opinion Today? [Sign up here]( and follow us on [Twitter]( and [Facebook](.
[FOLLOW US [Facebook Share]]( [Twitter Share]( SEND TO A FRIEND [Share with a friend]
You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Bloomberg Opinion Today newsletter.
[Unsubscribe]( | [Bloomberg.com]( | [Contact Us](
Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022