Yes, he blinked, finally. But it took a lot longer than most investors would have guessed.

President Trump is finally signaling that his trade war has caused enough mayhem and he’s willing to do some damage control. Trump, so far, has raised the average import tax on some $3 trillion worth of products from 2.5% to 27%. He has also threatened to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for not fixing the damage Trump’s own policies are causing.

Markets have responded with steep losses in stock values. Investors have been voting against Trump’s “America First” facade by selling US assets in favor of gold or foreign currencies. interest rate moves show that investors are preparing for higher inflation. Economists have been raising their recession odds, in some cases making a Trump contraction their baseline scenario.

Well, adverse market reactions finally got to Trump.

On April 17, Trump said in a social media post that Powell’s “termination cannot come fast enough,” triggering yet another market sell-off. But five days later, Trump told reporters, “I have no intention of firing” Powell. Markets jumped.

Trump and his team have also signaled that it’s time to rein in tariffs that, in some cases, are so severe they’re effectively an embargo on imported goods. Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent both recently said Trump’s draconian 145% tax on Chinese imports is too high and needs to come down, as long as China makes similar adjustments. New tariffs might be half the current level. Other Trump aides said that more than a dozen trade deals are in the works, which presumably would bring down high tariffs in exchange for trade-partner concessions.

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

If Trump’s goal is to reassure markets — at long last — it’s working. Stocks surged on April 23 as Trump signaled a measured retreat in his trade war. Interest rates dipped, and the VIX volatility index declined. One rally doesn’t repair all the damage Trump’s trade wars have caused, but if these trends continue, that would mark a return to normal markets not riven by the destructive forces of protectionism.

Trump, meanwhile, has revealed just how much damage he’s willing to tolerate (on behalf of ordinary Americans) before he makes concessions of his own. Four metrics tell the story.

Economists always say that the stock market isn’t the real economy, but it is a guess at where the future economy is heading. Stocks have been falling because Trump’s tariffs likely mean higher prices, lower profit margins, less spending by businesses and consumers, lower growth, and less hiring. If those trends get bad enough, it would trigger a recession.