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This week in Trumponomics: Scratch that recession

Markets are calming as President Trump gradually backtracks on the most strident elements of his trade war. Nobody would complain if the trend continued.

Peak panic in the trade war occurred in early April, after Trump announced "reciprocal tariffs" on dozens of countries that were far steeper than nearly anybody expected. A savage market sell-off compelled Trump to delay many of those tariffs for three months. US stocks have been rising since late April, and the year-to-date decline in the S&P 500 (^GSPC) is now just 4% — a lot better than the 15% drop as of April 8.

Trump's latest walkbacks are a relaxation of some tariffs on British imports and a suggestion that he could lower astronomical tariffs on Chinese imports to less-astronomical levels. US and Chinese negotiators will meet soon to open talks about a possible trade deal. The overall tariff rate on imports is still around 24%, up from 2.5% when Trump took office. But the positive developments have revived investor hopes that maybe Trump's tariffs won't be so damaging after all.

The real economy may also get a reprieve. The odds of a recession in betting markets have dropped to 51% from a peak of 66% on May 1. Those odds are a kind of crowdsourced estimate, not an economic forecast.

Read more: The latest news and updates on Trump's tariffs

But some economists are also getting a bit more optimistic. Yardeni Research raised its recession odds from 20% when Trump took office to 35% on March 5 and 45% on March 31. The firm is now dialing that back to 35%.

"We believe that China and the US both may be ready to suspend their tariffs on each other while they negotiate a trade deal," Ed Yardeni, president of the research firm, wrote in a May 9 analysis. "Neither side can bear the pain of a trade war. We also expect that Trump will declare victory in his trade war with the rest of the world. By the end of the 90-day postponement period of his reciprocal tariffs, the US is likely to have signed numerous agreements with America's major trading partners."

Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet

Wouldn't that be nice! The early July deadline for Trump's three-month delay on most reciprocal tariffs will roughly coincide with the moment US retailers start to run out of pre-tariff inventories, especially goods from China. Once the pre-tariff stuff is gone, shoppers will notice sharply higher prices on some imported goods while other products simply disappear from shelves. The tariff on Chinese imports is now as high as 145%, a tax hike so large that most of those tariffed goods are no longer arriving at US ports.