Update (6:50pm ET): Despite appearing to cave earlier when he ordered the use of the presidential plane to repatraite illegal aliens from the US, late on Sunday Colombia President Gustavo Petro ordered an increase of import tariffs on goods from the United States in retaliation to President Trump’s tariffs and sanctions.
Petro, in a post on the social platform X, said he ordered the “foreign trade minister to raise import tariffs from the U.S. by 25%.”
“American products whose price will rise within the national economy must be replaced by national production, and the government will help in this regard,” the post continued.
Le ordenó al ministro de comercio exterior elevar los aranceles de importaciones desde los EEUU en un 25%.
El ministerio debe ayudar a dirigir nuestra exportaciones a todo el mundo diferente a los EEUU. Nuestras exportaciones deben ampliarse. Invito a todas las comunidades… https://t.co/i8HSpRBxth
— Gustavo Petro (@petrogustavo) January 26, 2025
Then in a meandering post in Spanish, the president also issued several empty threats to Trump.
Trump, a mi no me gusta mucho viajar a los EEUU, es un poco aburridor, pero confieso que hay cosas meritorias, me gusta ir a los barrios negros de Washington, allí ví una lucha entera en la capital de los EEUU entre negros y latinos con barricadas, que me pareció una pendejada,…
— Gustavo Petro (@petrogustavo) January 26, 2025
Meanwhile, as Bloomberg notes, Colombian assets are set for a rout after US President Donald Trump said he’d implement a spate of tariffs and sanctions on the South American nation.
The announcement of an emergency 25% tariff on all Colombian goods coming into the US, made by Trump on social media on Sunday, caught traders off guard — most of the focus so far has been on levies on Mexico, Canada and China. The move will likely spark a slump that will reverberate across local bond, currency and equity markets when trading opens Monday.
Daniel Velandia, chief economist at Credicorp Capital Colombia, said the peso will weaken against the dollar Monday morning, adding that the economy could inch toward a recession in an “extreme scenario.”
“This is completely unexpected and unpredictable,” Velandia said. “We need to see how far Trump goes and how Colombia’s government will respond, hoping that diplomacy will be used to prevent adverse effects.”
And it’s not just Colombia: the Mexican peso is also tumbling more than 1% in late Sunday trading amid concerns that the southern US neighbor will be next to suffer Trump’s wrath.
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Update (4:15pm ET): that may have been the fastest trade war capitulation in history:
- COLOMBIA OFFERS PRESIDENTIAL PLANE TO HELP REPATRIATE DEPORTEES FROM US: CNN
🔴 #Atención | El Presidente @PetroGustavo dispone avión presidencial para el retorno digno de connacionales y liderará esfuerzos en la Asamblea Extraordinaria de la CELAC. pic.twitter.com/6ML5c8qjOp
— Presidencia Colombia 🇨🇴 (@infopresidencia) January 26, 2025
Full statement translated:
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For those in the market breathing repeated sighs of relief that Trump has – so far – not imposed sanctions on China or any other major country, we have some news, just wait.
Case in point: on Saturday afternoon, one day after Colombia’s president Gustavo Petro refused to allow two military flights from the United States full of undocumented migrants to land on its soil, President Donald Trump announced on his Truth Social platform that he would slap sweeping sanctions and travel bans on Colombia.
In a social media post, Trump said he has ordered an emergency 25% tariff on all Colombian goods coming into the US, which will be raised to 50% in one week.
He has also called for a travel ban and immediate visa revocations on Colombian government officials “and all Allies and Supporters” as well as visa sanctions on party members, family members and supporters of the government of President Gustavo Petro.
“Petro’s denial of these flights has jeopardized the National Security and Public Safety of the United States,” Trump said.
While the US is hardly overly reliant on Colombian exports – with the exception of cocaine whose prices are about to skyrocket – the speed and severity with which Trump unveiled his latest set of weaponized sanctions is an indication of just how ruthless and relentless Trump will be when dealing with other, much bigger trade partners.
Lastly, anyone hoping that Trump was just bluffing about tariffs on China, Europe, or NAFTA member states, is about to get a very nasty surprise.
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