KEY POINTS
  • "When you consider how high this market is, I doubt it can absorb much higher tariffs," CNBC's Jim Cramer says.
  • "If the Chinese really are eager to make a deal, well that would give the averages a major boost," the "Mad Money" host says.
  • "I think that as long as the interest rates stay low ... this sense of optimism can sustain itself until we get some bad news on the China front," he says.

CNBC's Jim Cramer said Tuesday that President Donald Trump's willingness to raise tariffs on Chinese imports was the "more important" statement that the leader of the free world made in a speech earlier that day.

In an address a the Economic Club of New York, Trump signaled that U.S. and China negotiators were "close" to settling on a so-called phase one trade deal, but threatened to increase tariffs "very substantially" if one does not come to fruition.