KEY POINTS
  • The prime victim of the sparring of tariffs will be consumers, because prices will likely go up, an AllianceBernstein investment chief said.
  • AllianceBernstein's Phelps also implied that heightened protectionism could affect the long-term investment decisions of shareholders.
  • The U.S. this week imposed a 10 percent levy on $200 billion of Chinese goods entering the U.S., including furniture and appliances.

President Donald Trump's administration is failing to recognize the negative effect America's trade dispute with China and other countries will have on his voters, an investment chief told CNBC.

Mark Phelps, chief investment officer of concentrated global growth at AllianceBernstein, said that the prime victim of the sparring of tariffs between the U.S., China and others will be consumers, because companies will likely conclude that they need to raise prices to deal with a downturn in imports from trading partners.