Trump announces 30% tariffs on Mexico, EU
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Due on MSNTariff Announcements and Political Shifts ExaminedWhat are some significant policy moves that have caught the attention of both investors and political observers? In a discussion of recent tariffs and political decisions, I shared my observations regarding trade rates,
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President Donald Trump has managed to make his erratic trade policies even more baffling to countries desperate to negotiate an escape from his wrath.
Tensions between the United States and Brazil have suddenly burst open. Brazil’s president promised to reciprocate against President Trump’s tariffs.
“The dots are not a great forecaster of future rate moves,” Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has warned, but every quarter the financial universe ponders the FOMC’s dot plot as though ...
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said Thursday that he will impose retaliatory tariffs on the United States if President Donald Trump follows through on a pledge to boost import taxes by 50% over the South American country’s criminal trial against his predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro.
U.S. stock futures dipped Monday as investors faced tariff uncertainties, with Trump planning higher tariffs and Musk announcing a new political party. Markets are cautious as economic data is sparse,
Lula was responding to Wednesday's threat by his US counterpart, Donald Trump, to impose a 50% import tax on Brazilian goods from 1 August. In a letter, Trump cited Brazil's treatment of former President Jair Bolsonaro as a trigger for tariff-hike.
The US on Monday set new August 1 deadline and warned Japan and South Korea of 25 percent tariff, 30 percent for South Africa and others as high as 40 percent. Over the past months, in response to US tariff threats,
Brazil faces persistent inflation and rising market volatility amid U.S. tariff threats, posing serious risks to economic stability.
Beyond the South East Asian producers, Trump's tariffs also raise costs for American companies that have been operating in the region for decades. The clothing and footwear industry stands to suffer - brands like Nike have long outsourced manufacturing to countries like Vietnam and Indonesia.
U.S. farmers had to navigate a trade war during Trump’s first term, but did so after years of rising commodity prices and government aid. This trade war is worse.
Trump's 50% Tariff on Brazilian Goods Like Coffee and Orange Juice Could Drive up US Breakfast Costs
President Donald Trump’s threat to boost import taxes by 50% over Brazilian goods could drive up the cost of breakfast in the United States