Trump, tariff
Digest more
21h
InvestorsHub on MSNDow Jones, S&P, Nasdaq, Markets React to Trade Progress, Intel Warnings, and Fed TensionsU.S. stock futures moved slightly higher Friday, positioning Wall Street for a positive week driven by solid corporate earnings and optimism surrounding trade agreements ahead of the Trump administration’s August tariff deadline.
As the tariff pause ends, the Trump administration should pivot to a more targeted and strategic policy that minimizes domestic harm.
Global investors got a harsh reminder of the risks around trade tariffs and U.S. President Donald Trump's deal-making on Saturday after he threatened fresh tariffs on his biggest trading partners in Europe and Mexico.
President Donald Trump on Tuesday said a trip to China might be “not too distant,” raising prospects that the leaders of the world's two largest economies may meet soon to help reset relations after moving to climb down from a trade war.
President Trump’s new levies, which have pushed the country’s tariffs to their highest levels in decades, are typically paid by importers when goods reach U.S. ports. So there is little mystery about who makes that first payment.
US President Donald Trump suggested that he would not go below 15% as he sets so-called reciprocal tariff rates ahead of an Aug. 1 deadline, an indication that the floor for the increased levies was rising.
President Donald Trump said he is considering rebates to US taxpayers from billions in tariff revenue flowing into the country.