# [WARNING] Trump threatens major tariffs on UK over digital tax

*Friday, April 24, 2026 at 10:18 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-24T10:18:26.948Z (13d ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, financial, FX, trade, US-UK, tariffs
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4558.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Trump has stated he will probably impose a "big tariff" on the UK if it maintains its digital services tax. This raises the risk of a renewed U.S.–UK trade dispute that could weaken GBP and dent sentiment toward UK‑exposed equities and, at the margin, global trade‑sensitive assets.

## Detail

1) What happened:
Trump publicly warned that he would "probably put a big tariff on the UK" if it does not roll back its digital services tax. While no specific tariff rate or product list has been announced yet, the language signals a willingness to weaponize trade policy against a close ally over tax disputes, echoing prior U.S. threats against European digital taxes.

2) Supply/demand impact:
This is not an immediate physical commodity supply shock, but it has meaningful macro and FX implications:
- Trade and growth: The threat, if enacted, would dampen export prospects for UK goods and services into the U.S., undermining UK growth expectations and corporate earnings, especially in sectors targeted by any future tariff schedule.
- Currency: Anticipation of a bilateral trade conflict tends to pressure the smaller partner’s currency; here, that implies downside risk for GBP versus USD and other majors.
- Risk sentiment: Renewed U.S. tariff rhetoric reinforces perceptions that the post‑2018 pattern of episodic tariff shocks remains intact, which can weigh on global risk appetite and, indirectly, on cyclical commodities tied to trade and manufacturing.

3) Affected assets and directional bias:
- GBP/USD and EUR/GBP: bear bias for GBP if markets price higher trade friction and lower UK growth.
- UK equities (FTSE 250 more than FTSE 100): negative on domestic‑growth and UK‑US trade exposure, though FTSE 100’s FX earnings hedge could partially offset.
- Global risk assets and industrial commodities: mild risk‑off bias if rhetoric escalates into concrete tariff schedules, with downside risk for global trade proxies.

4) Historical precedent:
Previous U.S. tariff threats and announcements under Trump (China, EU steel and aluminum, auto tariff threats) routinely triggered >1% intraday moves in affected FX pairs and equity indices when seen as credible escalation. Even without immediate implementation, credible tariff threats can move GBP >1% on positioning and risk‑premium repricing.

5) Duration of impact:
Near‑term impact depends on follow‑through. If the UK signals negotiation or retreat on the digital tax, market effects will be transient. If the U.S. issues specific tariff proposals or timelines, the shock becomes more durable, embedding a higher risk premium into GBP, UK rates, and UK‑exposed assets over a multi‑month horizon.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** GBP/USD, EUR/GBP, FTSE 250 Index, UK-linked corporate credit, S&P 500 multinational exporters
