The Supreme Court’s decision to withhold a ruling on the legality of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs keeps one of the biggest sources of market risk firmly in place. Investors waited for judicial clarity on a policy shaping prices, trade flows and corporate strategy.What they received instead was delay, and delay of this scale carries economic consequences.The court released several opinions this week but chose not to address the tariff regime that has reshaped supply chains since Trump returned to the White House in January 2025. With no indication of when the issue will return to the docket, markets must price an open-ended legal question around US trade policy.Uncertainty of this nature does not remain abstract. It feeds directly into how capital is allocated and how risk is assessed. Tariffs already influence margins and inflation expectations. When their legal foundation stays unresolved, those effects intensify.Boards hesitate to commit long-term capital when rules could change abruptly. Investors demand higher compensation for exposure to sectors tied to global trade. Currency markets grow more sensitive to political and legal signals. Market behaviour shifts away from fundamentals toward risk management.The legal challenge to Trump’s tariffs cuts to the core of presidential authority over trade. A clear decision would have provided a framework for companies and investors to operate within. Instead, businesses face policies that could be upheld, reshaped or overturned, with no timeline for resolution.Multinational companies feel this most sharply. Decisions on sourcing, pricing and investment remain provisional. Supply-chain changes that normally take years to lock in are approached cautiously. Capital expenditure plans face repeated review. Hiring becomes harder to justify.Inflation remains central to the debate. Firms facing unpredictable future costs build buffers into pricing. Those buffers land on consumers. The longer tariffs stay in legal doubt, the more likely higher price assumptions stay embedded across everyday goods.This feeds directly into the macro outlook. Unresolved trade policy shapes inflation forecasts, interest-rate expectations and bond yields. Equity valuations respond accordingly. When markets cannot assess the durability of a major economic policy, volatility becomes embedded rather than episodic.Risk premiums rise across equities, currencies and credit. Not because of a single data release, but because of structural ambiguity.Sectors with heavy exposure to global trade sit on the front line. Manufacturing, autos, technology hardware and retail all carry heightened sensitivity to tariff outcomes. Investors must model a wider range of scenarios, widening valuation gaps between companies able to adapt and those more exposed to prolonged trade friction.The political dimension sharpens the impact. Tariffs remain a cornerstone of President Trump’s economic strategy. With the Supreme Court silent, the policy stays fully in force but legally unresolved. Markets now face a situation where a central economic tool carries lasting legal uncertainty.Capital markets respond logically. Traders price for instability when outcomes remain open-ended. Lenders tighten conditions for borrowers whose earnings depend on predictable trade rules. Dealmakers delay transactions that rely on cross-border efficiency. Private investment slows as uncertainty stretches from quarters into years.Consumers feel the consequences. Higher prices, slower wage growth and weaker business investment form a feedback loop that restrains economic momentum. Trade policy may originate in Washington, but its impact reaches shop floors, households and retirement portfolios worldwide.With no timetable for a ruling, attention now turns to every signal from the US political and legal system for clues on when the tariff question will be settled. Court calendars, congressional debate and regulatory guidance take on added importance in a market environment searching for direction.Until judicial clarity arrives, the unresolved status of Trump’s tariff regime remains a defining risk factor for global markets. Investors adapt to almost any policy when boundaries are clear. Adapting to uncertainty proves far harder.