America Sells Uncertainty: How Trump’s Tariffs Are Changing the Market Regime in 2026
America Sells Uncertainty: How Trump’s Tariffs Are Changing the Market Regime in 2026

America Sells Uncertainty: How Trump’s Tariffs Are Changing the Market Regime in 2026

Ellie Montgomery · USA · February 24, 2026 · 3m

Disclaimer: This material is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

In February 2026, markets are trading uncertainty about what comes next. After the U.S. Supreme Court overturned part of the previous “emergency” tariffs, the Trump administration introduced a new global 10% rate (with public discussion of a possible increase to 15%).

It is this shift in rules and legal foundations that has fueled volatility: market participants are pricing multiple scenarios, not a single forecast.

Below is a breakdown of the market regime through four indicators: the dollar, gold, bond yields, and crypto.

What Happened With Tariffs — and Why Markets Are Reacting

A short timeline that matters for understanding the reaction:

  1. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down part of the legal basis for tariffs introduced as an emergency measure.
  2. The U.S. then launched a new tariff regime: a 10% global rate, with hints at a potential tightening to 15%.
  3. At the same time, warnings were directed at trading partners “not to play games with trade deals”, signaling that tariff policy could shift quickly and unpredictably.

For investors, this matters as a volatility driver that is instantly priced in through expectations about inflation, growth, and interest rates.

Why Tariffs Flip the Risk-On / Risk-Off Switch

Markets like predictability. Tariffs destroy predictability in three areas at once:

  • Corporate margins and supply chains (cost surprises).
  • Inflation expectations (what happens to prices and imports).
  • The interest rate path (how central banks will respond).

When participants cannot estimate the “price of money” 3–6 months ahead, they typically reduce risk. That is the risk-off regime.

Four Market Regime Indicators: Dollar, Gold, Yields, Crypto

1) The Dollar: The Uncertainty Premium

On tariff news, the dollar can move in different directions (as a safe haven or as a reaction to growth/inflation expectations). What matters more than a single day’s direction is that the dollar becomes a fast conduit of regime shifts: strength often pressures risk assets, weakness eases conditions.

If you hold crypto and see accelerating risk-off, watch the dollar as a barometer, not as a root cause.

2) Gold: Where Fear Goes

Amid tariff and court-related uncertainty, gold received support as a safe haven — Reuters specifically noted gains driven by uncertainty around U.S. tariff policy.

If gold rises during nervous conditions, it often signals that the market is willing to pay for protection. The price of insurance is going up.

3) U.S. Treasury Yields: Where the Market Sees Rates and Growth

Tariff uncertainty also shows up in bonds: turbulence around tariffs has shaken the Treasury market.

Yields reflect combined expectations for growth, inflation, and rates. When those expectations are being rebuilt, risk assets tend to react sharply.

4) Crypto: Beta to Risk

In 2026, crypto still frequently trades as a high-beta asset: in risk-off, it falls faster; in risk-on, it rebounds faster. Macro conditions remain a key driver for crypto, and it often reacts first due to its 24/7 nature and embedded leverage.

Conclusion

The U.S. tariff agenda in 2026 is not just about import duties. It is about switching the market regime through uncertainty. Amid legal reversals and potential rate path changes, markets are pricing scenarios, not a single outcome.

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New U.S. tariffs and why crypto in 2026 behaves like beta to risk | Hexn