Trump TACO acronym meaning, explanation. What does it have to do with Iran?
Have you seen people commenting “TACO” on the recent news that the threat to Iran has been postponed? Here’s what the acronym that became the Trump jab means:
- A Bloomberg columnist introduced NACHO to Trump’s acronym.
- NACHO comes from the use of TACO to describe President Trump’s tariff orders.
Two months into the Iran war, the ceasefire remains in effect, but disruptions to key oil shipping routes have not significantly eased.
The Strait of Hormuz is a waterway that connects the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Oman, and the Arabian Sea. It is a checkpoint for about 20% of the world’s oil shipments and has been a major point of tension, especially since Iran and the United States agreed to a ceasefire.
Iran has tightened its control of the strait, and the United States has blocked Iranian ports and ships, slightly slowing traffic. As a result, oil and gas prices have increased around the world.
President Trump had previously given Iran a series of deadlines to open the strait, but pushed back on those deadlines before a ceasefire could be reached. This prompted a chorus of “TACO” from his critics. But as tensions over the Strait of Hormuz continue, a new abbreviation is hitting social media. What does “nacho” mean?
What does trump nacho mean?
Bloomberg columnist Javier Blas posted on X that a trader told him it was NACHO, not TACO.
It stands for “Holmes has no chance of opening.”
President Trump indicated in the Oval Office on April 29 that he was prepared to continue blockading Iran’s ports for several months.
Asked about the NACHO acronym, White House press secretary Khush Desai said: “Are you the same genius who thought President Trump would never enter into a voluntary most-favored-nation drug pricing agreement or renegotiate abandoned trade deals?”
What does Trump TACO mean?
Financial Times columnist Robert Armstrong coined the term “TACO trade” in May 2025 to describe how some investors were expecting a market rebound amid repeated Trump tariffs.
This acronym stands for “Trump always chickens out.”
Armstrong described the TACO trade as a strategy by some investors to buy into a depressed market on the assumption that President Trump would rescind his tariff orders, and then assume the market would recover.
President Trump previously shot back at a reporter who asked him about the term, saying, “You ask such mean questions. That’s called negotiation.”
The Supreme Court ruled on February 20 that many of President Trump’s tariffs are illegal.
Contributed by: Bart Jansen, Michael Loria, Christopher Cann, USA TODAY
Kinsey Crowley is a Trump Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Please contact KCrowley@usatodayco.com. follow her X (Twitter), thread, blue sky and TikTok.

