Asked about ‘Taco’ and Tariff, Trump dropped into the reporter

US President Trump, it seems, not one for “Tacco”. The question is not a dish made with Taco Tortilus, but a reference to how the markets are responding to its tariff policies.Taco Trade, is always a tongue-in-chow word coined by Robert Armstrong, a columnist of the Financial Times, a small, a small, a small, a tongue for trump. It is adopted by some analysts to describe a potentially attractive pattern, in which tariffs are threatened in the markets after Trump, only when it rely to retaliate rapidly and gives countries more time to interact on millions. The President has spent years in cultivating a reputation for political muscles. So when he was asked a reporter at the Oval Office on Wednesday whether the word could be a legitimate description of his approach to Tariff, Trump reacted with Ire. “I was out of chicken? I never heard,” he said. “Never say what you said,” he said to the reporter. “This is a bad question. For me, this is the most atheist question.”But the President’s again, off-back, has been given by tariffs so far on Wall Street. Trump jumped into the markets on Tuesday after delaying the proposed 50% tariff on the European Union that he threatened a few days ago.