Trump, tariffs and global trade tensions
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"The tariffs could hurt American companies by prompting foreign customers who would normally buy U.S. products to choose suppliers elsewhere. But perhaps more challenging will be the difficulty of tap...
From Space.com
Trump's "reciprocal" tariffs on dozens of countries were set to take effect on Wednesday, including massive 104% duties on Chinese goods, deepening his global trade war even as he prepared for negoti...
From U.S. News & World Report
Major Asian stock markets rebounded Tuesday morning, with Japan leading gains, following a sharp selloff caused by fears around U.S. tariffs.
From Wall Street Journal
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Trump, Republicans
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Manufacturers struggling to make long-term plans. Farmers facing retaliation from Chinese buyers. U.S. households burdened with higher prices. Republican senators are confronting the Trump administrat...
From Associated Press News
Business leaders are speaking out against President Trump's trade war.
From MSNBC
In a bitterly divided 5-4 decision, the court said that the migrants, whom the administration has accused of being gang members, must get a chance to challenge their deportation before they are taken...
From Houston Chronicle
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But some economists predict Americans will feel the pain – at least in the short term – and low-income Americans most of all. Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning.
An additional 50% tariff on China will go into effect Wednesday, bringing the total tariff rate against Beijing to 104%.
China stunned by JD Vance calling its workers ‘peasants’ as 104% levy comes into force - Asian markets slump again in Wednesday’s early trade as Trump’s full roster of ‘reciprocal’ tariffs takes effec
Ken Griffin: The Citadel founder—and major Republican donor—said at an event Monday that Trump’s tariffs are a “huge policy mistake,” with Bloomberg reporting he urged audience members to lobby Trump to step back on the tariffs and said he’s “really afraid of [the U.S.] abdicating our role of leadership for the free world.”
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President Donald Trump's tariff announcements are wreaking havoc on the auto industry. Here's why car buyers should approach the market cautiously.
Trade economists predict the United States could pay over $712 billion more in import tariffs this year compared to 2024.
President Donald Trump threatened to add new tariffs on China if Beijing doesn’t remove its retaliatory duties by today. Follow live news updates as countries and the stock market react to Trump’s tariff moves.
“The tariffs will make building AI datacenters much more expensive, both because AI servers are largely imported and will face tariffs, at least until supply chains can be rejigged, and because much of the other equipment in datacenters, like the cooling and power infrastructure, is imported as well,” says Chris Miller, author of Chip War.
Ford CEO Jim Farley told Fox that Ford can tolerate tariffs, there are even some benefits, but only if details on parts get sorted out.
President Donald Trump just ignited a direct showdown with the one nation that might be able to beat the United States in a trade war. Trump’s escalation against China — which is about to face tariffs of at least 104% on goods entering the US — is the most serious pivot yet in his global tariff onslaught and has the most potential to inflict severe blowback on American citizens in soaring prices.
Levi Strauss & Co. maintained a full-year outlook that excludes the impact from sweeping US tariffs that are poised to hike costs of clothing around the world.