Trump delays Liberation Day 2.0
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A look at countries that received Trump's tariff letters
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Trump, tariffs and Free trade
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Markets had dismissed tariff risks under the assumption that Trump would follow an earlier pattern and back off, in what became known as the so-called TACO trade. That allowed stocks to reach new record-high territory recently, marking a stunning rebound from the collapse triggered by his “Liberation Day” reciprocal tariffs in April.
P resident Donald Trump shared letters Monday informing governments in Japan and South Korea that he’s levying 25% tariffs on their imports to the U.S., the first in an anticipated slew of tariff notices the administration is expected to send out before its self-imposed tariff pause ends Wednesday—though the letter suggests the rates could still change again.
Trump administration faces pressure to clinch more trade deals, with a temporary tariff freeze on dozens of countries set to expire.
Trump's tariffs have companies scrambling as they navigate cost increases. Here are the companies that have talked about hiking prices.
Dan Scavino sold the day before President Donald Trump officially announced reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trading partners
University of Michigan professor Justin Wolfers updated the "TACO" acronym and expressed his concern about what could be about to happen.
Although Mr Trump tempered his Liberation Day barrage, tariffs have been relentlessly creeping up. The average rate has reached around 10%, compared with just 2.5% last year. The threatened August 1st and sectoral tariffs would raise that to 16-17%,
President Trump is pushing through with his tariff agenda, unveiling a new batch of letters to country leaders outlining tariffs on goods imported from their countries beginning in August and a warning to BRICS nations.