Trump, tariff
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Just hours after hitting all-time highs, Wall Street was poised to open with losses on Friday, a possible sign that President Donald Trump’s wave of tariff letters is again raising concern among
The U.S. has sanctioned Myanmar's military junta and refused to acknowledge its rule, so Mr. Trump's personal letter to its leader was welcomed, despite the subject.
Canada has imposed retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods and pushed back on the president’s taunts of making Canada the 51st state.
Markets hit record highs despite new Trump tariffs on Canada, Brazil, and EU. Earnings season begins, with volatility ticking up and investors watching guidance closely.
Instead on Wednesday, Trump continued to threaten countries with higher tariffs in the near future by publishing open letters to the Philippines, Brunei, Moldova, Algeria, Iraq, Libya and Sri Lanka that set new tariff rates ranging from 20% to 30% that he said he would impose on Aug. 1.
President Donald Trump has sent tariff letters to ASEAN countries, with most charting lower duties except Malaysia. Andrea Heng and Susan Ng decode the tariff rates and the influencing factors his administration may have considered for Southeast Asian trade partners with Priyanka Kishore,
President Trump posted letters to his Truth Social platform Wednesday outlining tariff levels for seven countries. Trump said he would levy 30% tariffs on Libya, Iraq, and Algeria, effective Aug. 1. Moldova and Brunei will get 25% tariffs,
Trump’s new tariff letters have sent shockwaves across global markets as he targets 22 countries with tough new trade threats just weeks before the August 1 deadline. From close allies like Japan and South Korea to BRICS nations like Brazil and South Africa,