Analysis of President Trump
Revoking Hong Kong’s
Free Port Trade Status
A Systemic Risk Assessment Against the Backdrop of Global Liquidity Contraction
From Japan’s Carry Trade Collapse to the HKD Peg Crisis:
A Complete Transmission Chain Analysis
Based on the latest data as of April 2026, this paper systematically analyzes the probability of President Trump comprehensively revoking Hong Kong’s Most Favored Nation status and free port trade status. The research finds that against the triple backdrop of global liquidity contraction at its source (the end of Japan’s zero interest rates), structural narrowing of China’s capital channels (the loss of Hong Kong’s international status), and Trump’s transformation from a “deal-making president” to a “wartime president,” the probability of Hong Kong’s free port status being revoked has risen from a “low-probability tail risk” to a “high-probability medium-term event.” This paper constructs a complete transmission chain from Japanese carry trade fund repatriation to HKD peg failure, and combined with Trump’s actual behavioral patterns in his second term, assesses the systemic impact on the global financial system.
Structural Contraction of Global Liquidity: Starting from the Source
1.1 Japan: The End of 30 Years of “Free Money”
Over the past thirty years, the Bank of Japan injected massive amounts of cheap capital into the global financial system through zero interest rates and quantitative easing, constructing the largest carry trade platform in human history. As of April 2026, this system is undergoing systematic collapse.
| Indicator | Value | Historical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Japan 10Y Gov Bond Yield | 2.40% | Highest since 1999[1] |
| China 10Y Gov Bond Yield | 1.73% | Lowest since Aug 2025[2] |
| BOJ Policy Rate | 0.75% | Highest since 1995[3] |
| BOJ Balance Sheet | ¥662 trillion | Continuing to shrink from peak[4] |
| Japan FY2026 Debt Servicing | ¥31.3 trillion | First exceeding ¥30T, +10.8% YoY[5] |
| Japan Budget Assumed Rate | 3.0% | Highest since 1997[6] |
The scale of the yen carry trade far exceeds surface figures. Deutsche Bank estimates related exposure at up to $20 trillion based on Japan’s government balance sheet[7]; the BIS notes that the yen-to-other-currencies swap market is approximately $14 trillion[8]. This is not a question of “trading strategy” — it is the foundational liquidity infrastructure of the global financial system.
“The largest carry trade in human history was built on the assumption that Japan could lock in low interest rates forever — and that assumption is disappearing.”
When Japan’s 10-year bond yield (2.40%) exceeds China’s (1.73%), this was almost unimaginable over the past two decades. This “yield inversion” signals a fundamental change in the underlying logic of global capital flows — returns on Japanese government bonds have become “attractive,” rather than being scorned by investors as in the past.
1.2 China: A Limited New Water Source and Permanent Evaporation
China’s ultra-low interest rate environment is giving the renminbi characteristics similar to the yen as a “funding currency.” J.P. Morgan explicitly noted that the renminbi can be used as a funding currency to exploit investment opportunities in other markets[9]. However, unlike Japan, China imposes capital controls, making this new water source’s flow far less than Japan’s.
More critically, Chinese capital outflows include a unique component absent in Japan and Korea — self-preservation-driven one-way outflow. According to Henley & Partners, 15,200 Chinese millionaires emigrated overseas in 2024, ranking first globally for the third consecutive year[10]. Among billionaire-level entrepreneurs, 11.3% have already initiated immigration procedures[11]. The goal of these funds is not yield, but legal safety, personal safety, and asset certainty — they will not return because Chinese interest rates drop or the stock market rebounds.
Hong Kong: From International Financial Center to “A Second Shanghai”
2.1 A Fundamental Role Transformation
The Asia Society Policy Institute’s 2025 report noted[12]: “Historically, Hong Kong has been China’s primary gateway to global markets, especially as a conduit for foreign capital inflows, but this role is gradually transforming. Hong Kong is increasingly becoming a controlled outlet through which Chinese households invest their vast savings pool in foreign assets via carefully calibrated liberalization mechanisms.”
This transformation is reflected in a fundamental substitution of capital composition:
| Indicator | Trend |
|---|---|
| Mainland China firms as share of “foreign” offices | 26.3%, doubled since 2013[13] |
| U.S. and Japanese firms share | Continuing to decline[13] |
| Southbound daily average purchases | Exceeding HK$200B, 1/3 of total liquidity[14] |
| Alibaba HKEX vs U.S. trading volume ratio | Hong Kong is 4-8x that of the U.S.[15] |
2.2 Hong Kong as China’s Core Arbitrage Node
Hong Kong is the core of Chinese capital arbitrage because it straddles two systems simultaneously — on one side, mainland China’s capital controls and renminbi system; on the other, free USD convertibility and the international legal framework. This “straddling” position enables interest rate arbitrage, exchange rate arbitrage, regulatory arbitrage, tariff arbitrage, legal arbitrage, and listing arbitrage to all be conducted through Hong Kong.
All arbitrage shares a single common prerequisite: the international community recognizes Hong Kong as an independent economy and legal jurisdiction distinct from mainland China. When this prerequisite is revoked, it is not one type of arbitrage that closes — all arbitrage goes to zero simultaneously.
The U.S. and EU: The Legal Framework for a Dual Siege Is Already in Place
3.1 The United States: Escalating Sanctions on Hong Kong
3.2 The EU: An Overwhelming 473:23 Signal
On November 28, 2024, the European Parliament passed a resolution by an overwhelming margin of 473 to 23[20], calling on the EU to revoke Hong Kong’s special tariff treatment. Although currently a non-binding resolution, the margin sends an unambiguous signal. In 2023, bilateral goods trade between Hong Kong and the EU reached RMB 520 billion[21]; once formally implemented, tariffs on Chinese goods re-exported through Hong Kong to the EU could surge from 2.85% to 30%-60%.
3.3 Bipartisan Consensus: The Rarest Unity in American Politics
Hong Kong has become one of the very few genuinely bipartisan issues in American politics. Republican hawks (Rubio, Smith) and Democratic human rights advocates (Merkley, McGovern) co-signed the Hong Kong ETO bill. Smith declared: “‘One Country, Two Systems’ is dead, and our laws must be updated to reflect this reality.” This means the direction of Hong Kong policy is irreversible regardless of who governs in the future.
Trump’s Behavioral Pattern: From “Peace President” to “Wartime President”
4.1 2025 vs 2026: Two Completely Different Presidents
| Dimension | 2025 | 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Diplomatic means | Negotiation, tariffs, sanctions | Military strikes, head-of-state capture, invasion threats |
| Attitude toward China | Praised Xi Jinping, “G2 era” | Trade truce maintained but atmosphere tense |
| Military action | Continued predecessor’s counter-terrorism | Bombed 7 countries, including 3 new targets |
| Posting style | Strategic, rhythmic | Explosive, late-night binges, erratic |
| Self-perception | “The greatest dealmaker” | Posted AI images of himself as Jesus |
| Officials’ reaction | Cooperative execution | Anonymous leaks: “the president is undermining negotiations” |
| Market impact | Predictable policy signals | Single post triggers 300% oil price volatility |
| Constraints | Influenced by Congress and advisors | “No one can constrain the president’s decisions on the use of force” |
Key turning point: According to TIME[22], after failing to win the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize, Trump opened 2026 with a shocking military adventure — raiding Venezuela and capturing President Maduro on January 3, 2026[23]. Within less than three months thereafter, he also bombed Iran[23], threatened to invade Colombia and Mexico[24], revived the idea of annexing Greenland[25], and reportedly ordered special forces to draft Greenland invasion plans[25]。
According to ACLED data, the U.S. executed 658 airstrikes and drone strikes from January to December 2025[29], approaching Biden’s four-year total (694). Listed chronologically:
| Country | Nature | Timing | Specific Actions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Somalia | Counter-terror escalation | From Feb 2025 | At least 111 airstrikes all year, exceeding Bush+Obama+Biden combined[30] |
| Iraq | Counter-terror targeted killing | Mar 2025 | Airstrike on Anbar Province, killed ISIS #2 Abu Khadija[28] |
| 也门 | Air/sea strikes | Mar-May 2025 | “Operation Rough Rider,” massive airstrikes on Houthis, cost exceeding $1B[28] |
| Iran 🆕 | Nuclear facility strikes | Jun 2025 | “Midnight Hammer” operation, B-2 bombers struck Natanz, Isfahan, Fordow nuclear facilities[31]; Feb 2026 second coordinated strike[28] |
| Nigeria 🆕 | New counter-terror target | Dec 2025 | Christmas Eve airstrike on ISIS-affiliated militants in Sokoto state, citing “protecting Christians”[30] |
| Syria | Counter-terror retaliation | Dec 2025 | Retaliation for attack on U.S. forces, struck 70 ISIS targets[28]; expanded to 35 targets in Jan 2026 |
| Venezuela 🆕 | Regime change | Late 2025-Jan 2026 | Bombed Caracas, special forces captured President Maduro, killed ~75 guards[23] |
🆕 = New target country not struck by any predecessor. Also: Cuba subjected to economic blockade but not directly bombed; Colombia, Mexico, and Greenland threatened but no action taken.
4.2 Calibrating the Extent of “Beyond Expectations”
Demanding the annexation of Greenland — a NATO ally’s territory — ranks far higher on the international relations textbook “scale of audacity” than revoking a Chinese city’s trade privileges.And Trump has already done the former.Signing an executive order revoking Hong Kong’s MFN status falls at the “least beyond expectations” end of his 2026 behavioral spectrum.
If the Order Is Signed: The Impact Transmission Chain
5.1 Re-Export Trade Goes to Zero
The premise of Hong Kong’s re-export trade is that “the intermediary node enjoys different treatment from the origin.” When both the U.S. and EU classify Hong Kong as equivalent to mainland China, the economic logic of “relabeling” exports through Hong Kong will instantly vanish. Hong Kong’s total annual goods trade of approximately HK$8.8 trillion, over 90% of which is re-export in nature, faces the risk of “going to zero.”
5.2 All Arbitrage Nodes Go to Zero Simultaneously
Interest rate arbitrage, exchange rate arbitrage, regulatory arbitrage, tariff arbitrage, legal arbitrage, listing arbitrage — all are built on the premise that “Hong Kong ≠ mainland China.” When this premise is legally revoked, it is not one type of arbitrage that closes, but all arbitrage that simultaneously ceases to function.
5.3 The HKD Peg Is Shaken
The HKD’s linked exchange rate system pegged to USD rests on five prerequisites: Hong Kong is an independent economy, capital flows freely, the international community recognizes its independent status, there is sufficient USD inflow, and the U.S. permits its operation within the dollar system. When MFN status is revoked, every prerequisite will be impacted. The HKD accounts for about 1.0-1.4% of global SWIFT payments, but its true value lies not in its own payment volume but in its role as the largest “converter” between the renminbi and the dollar — approximately 75% of global offshore RMB settlement passes through Hong Kong.
5.4 Global Chain Reaction
The instant Trump posts the signing tweet, global trading systems will simultaneously calculate at millisecond speed: HKD peg viability (short HKD), Hong Kong equity repricing (sell-off), offshore RMB clearing system (liquidity drain), yen carry trade cascading unwinds (yen surge), global risk appetite reset (VIX spike). These do not occur sequentially — they occur simultaneously, and each reaction accelerates the others.
Probability Assessment and Scenario Analysis
6.1 Three Scenarios
| Scenario | Description | Probability | Trigger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario A: Leverage | Continued threat as negotiating leverage against China without signing | 40% | U.S.-China maintain “G2” framework |
| Scenario B: Gradual Escalation | First close ETOs, then expand sanctions, finally sign the order | 35% | U.S.-China relations continue deteriorating without dramatic conflict |
| Scenario C: One Step | Directly sign comprehensive revocation due to triggering event | 25% | China provokes Trump on Iran/Taiwan issues |
Comprehensive assessment: Within the next 18 months (April 2026 to October 2027), the cumulative probability of Hong Kong’s free port trade status being substantively weakened or revoked is approximately 55-65%. This is not a tail risk but a baseline scenario that needs to be priced into core investment decisions.
6.2 Why Markets Are Severely Underpricing This Risk
Current markets are still pricing Hong Kong risk using the 2025 “deal-making Trump” framework[26]. But the 2026 Trump has already proven that his action boundary far exceeds anyone’s imagination — he captured a sovereign nation’s president, bombed seven countries, threatened to invade allied territory, and his officials say no one can constrain him[27]. Under this behavioral pattern, signing an executive order revoking Hong Kong’s MFN status would not even be the most aggressive thing he does that week.
The least “beyond expectations” card is paradoxically the least priced-in risk — this is currently the global financial market’s greatest pricing error.
Counterarguments and Adversarial Analysis
Any serious policy analysis must withstand “red team” testing. Below, seven major counterarguments are constructed and addressed one by one.
8.1 Counter #1: “Trump Is a Dealmaker; He Won’t Actually Destroy Hong Kong”
Counter: Trump’s core identity is that of a dealmaker. His attitude toward China has always differed from his stance on Iran and Venezuela. The 2025 Busan agreement remains in effect. He won’t do anything “irreversible.”
Adversarial response: The TACO (Trump Always Chickens Out) trading pattern actually supports the opposite conclusion. On Wall Street, the TACO trade means buying stocks cheaply after tariff announcements drive prices down, then selling for profit when tariffs are delayed or reduced and markets rebound.[32]
Signing the revocation of Hong Kong’s free trade port status would trigger violent swings in HKD, HK stocks, offshore RMB, and global equities — for those who know in advance, this is a trillion-dollar shorting opportunity. Data already shows this pattern exists:[33]
| Event | Pre-trade Signal | Market Reaction |
|---|---|---|
| Mar 23 “Iran talks productive” post | ~$580M in anomalous oil futures trading 16 min before post[33] | Crude price plunged |
| Before Apr 8 Iran ceasefire | Markets pre-positioned before deadline[34] | Stocks surged, oil plunged |
| Polymarket Iran-related markets | “Magamyman” account placed precise bets before strikes[32] | Profited over $500K |
Nobel laureate Krugman called this behavior “tantamount to treason if war and peace decisions are made to serve market interests”[33]. Senator Chris Murphy called it “incredible corruption”[33]. Regardless of whether direct manipulation exists, the TACO pattern means:Signing the revocation of Hong Kong’s status is itself a super-TACO trade — short first, sign, then “negotiate” a softening, then profit from the rebound.
8.2 Counter #2: “Wall Street and U.S. Corporations Will Fight to the Death Against This”
Counter: Wall Street has extensive operations in Hong Kong; an HKD peg collapse would impact the U.S. Treasury market. The establishment will use lobbying groups to prevent this.
Adversarial response: This argument’s premise is that Wall Street still has major irreplaceable interests in China/Hong Kong. But 2026’s reality is fundamentally different from 2020:
In 2024, China’s actual foreign investment utilization plunged 27.1% YoY, the largest decline in history. 37% of Korean companies in China plan to withdraw within five years. Although bilateral U.S.-China trade remains massive, the structural decoupling trend is irreversible. In 2025, U.S. tariffs on China were raised to as high as 125% — by the counter’s own logic, Wall Street should have prevented the tariff escalation, but it did not.[35]
More critically: if Wall Street smart money knows in advance that the order is about to be signed, what would they do? Not oppose — but pre-position short trades for profit. Between opposing and profiting, Wall Street always chooses the latter. The TACO trading pattern makes “opposing revocation” and “profiting from revocation” the same group of people doing things at different points in time.
8.3 Counter #3: “Hong Kong Still Has Utility Value for the U.S.”
Counter: The U.S. trade surplus with Hong Kong has been consistently high. Hong Kong is an intelligence operations window. Complete closure also damages U.S. interests.
Adversarial response: The first principle of trade war is to strike the opponent, not to weigh your own interests in your opponent’s territory.If the U.S. only did things with “zero cost to itself,” it would not have imposed 125% tariffs on China, nor bombed Iranian nuclear facilities.Every major strategic action has costs; the distinction lies in whether the decision-maker believes the benefits outweigh the costs.
Revoking Hong Kong’s status would deal a far greater blow to China’s financial system than to U.S. interests. It’s like blowing up a bridge in war — you can’t use it either, but if it’s more important to the enemy’s supply line, destroying it is the correct tactic.
8.4 Counter #4: “The HKD Peg Is More Resilient Than You Think”
Counter: 1997, 2008, 2019, 2020 — every time markets predicted the HKD was done, the HKMA held. $400B in reserves plus Beijing support makes the risk-reward unfavorable for shorts.
Adversarial response: The HKD’s past resilience was built on China’s continuously growing foreign exchange reserves. But cracks have appeared in this foundation:
| Indicator | Value | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Total FX Reserves (Mar 2026) | $3.342 trillion[36] | Nominally still world’s largest |
| Historical Peak | $3.993T (June 2014) | $650B below peak |
| U.S. Treasury Holdings | Declined from 2013 peak of $1.317T to $730.7B in Jul 2025[37] | Declined over 45% |
| Gold Reserves | 74.19M troy oz (~2,298 tonnes)[36] | 15 consecutive months of accumulation |
| USD Share of Global FX Reserves | From 71% in 1999 to ~57% by end-2025[38] | 30-year low |
| Mar 2026 Single-Month Reserve Change | -$85.7B[36] | Largest single-month decline in a decade |
Despite annual trade surpluses exceeding $1 trillion, China’s total FX reserves have shown virtually no significant increase — where did the money go? The answer: self-preservation capital outflows, overseas corporate investment, foreign debt repayment, and exchange rate stabilization.China’s FX “reservoir” is not as full as it appears on the surface, and the share of USD assets within it continues to decline — the “dollar ammunition” available to defend the HKD peg is far less than a decade ago.
8.5 Counter #5: “China Has Retaliatory Capabilities”
Counter: China can dump U.S. Treasuries, restrict U.S. firms’ operations in China, and choke rare earth supplies. The logic of mutually assured destruction will prevent both sides from going to extremes.
Adversarial response: China does indeed have retaliatory capabilities; this is the counter’s strongest point. However, two things must be noted: First, China already deployed most of its retaliatory tools in the 2025 tariff war (retaliatory tariffs, rare earth export controls, entity lists), yet failed to prevent Trump from raising tariffs to 125%[35]. Second, dumping U.S. Treasuries is a double-edged sword — China’s Treasury holdings have already declined 45% from peak[37]; further selling would depress the value of its remaining holdings and accelerate U.S.-China financial decoupling — precisely the outcome Beijing is trying to avoid.
8.6 Counter #6: “Six Years Without Taking the Final Step — Why Now?”
Counter: From 2020 to 2026, U.S. actual measures have been limited to partial adjustments, not touching the core of the financial system. If they were going to do it, they would have already.
Adversarial response: By the same logic, 125% tariffs on China should not have appeared in early 2025 — but they did[35]. The U.S. military raiding Venezuela and capturing its president in January 2026 should not have happened either — but it did[23]. “Hasn’t done it before” has never been evidence that “won’t do it in the future.” The defining feature of Trump’s second term is precisely — shattering every expectation of “he won’t actually do it.”
Tens of thousands of bots monitor Trump’s posts 24/7[27], Citadel has a dedicated screen tracking his social media[27], a single post triggers 300% spikes in oil volatility[27] — global financial markets have voted with real money to prove:Every word this person utters has a price. And the price of a “signing the revocation of Hong Kong’s MFN status” post could be the largest single-day market shock since 2008.
8.7 Comprehensive Verdict: Counterarguments Are Valid but Do Not Change the Conclusion
Of the seven counterarguments, four were completely dismantled (TACO logic inversion, Wall Street interest premise changed, probability methodology, action evidence), two were substantially weakened (first principle is to strike the opponent, China’s FX quality has changed), and one retains some validity (China’s retaliatory capability does exist).
The counter’s strongest point — China’s retaliatory capability — only affects “how costly,” not “whether it will be done.”When a wartime president operating in TACO mode sees a trillion-dollar shorting opportunity, “high costs” has never been a reason to stop him. The costs are borne by the entire world; the profits are harvested by the informed.
Conclusion
This paper, from the macro perspective of global liquidity contraction, constructs a complete transmission chain from the closure of Japan’s carry trade water source to HKD peg failure:
End of Japan’s 30-year zero interest rates → Closure of the world’s largest carry trade funding source → China’s limited low-rate output, constrained by capital controls → Permanent evaporation of Chinese self-preservation capital, not participating in global circulation → Hong Kong transforms from international free port to controlled valve → U.S. and EU revoke Hong Kong’s special status, legal framework already in place → Re-export trade faces zeroing out → Arbitrage nodes die → HKD peg fails → China’s last institutional link to the dollar system severs
Every link in this chain is already happening. And Trump’s transformation from “peace president” to “wartime president” in 2026 adds a time accelerator to the entire chain. The risk of a global financial storm is not whether those structural factors exist — they are all already in place — the risk is whether the trigger comes as a gradual release or an instantaneous detonation. In the hands of an unconstrained, unpredictable leader who posts late at night comparing himself to Jesus while simultaneously waging war on seven countries, the weight of that match speaks for itself.
The kindling is piled high. We are standing on the eve of a structural fracture of the global financial system.