US President Donald Trump is all set to announce reciprocal tariffs on 2 April, which will immediately come into effect.
By Mark John, Francesco Canepa and Leika Kihara LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) -The latest round of U.S. trade tariffs unveiled on ...
US President Donald Trump announced plans for sweeping tariffs Wednesday, saying “our country has been looted, pillaged, ...
A group of Republican senators voted along with Democrats on Wednesday for a resolution to undo President Trump’s 25 percent ...
Economists and analysts have expressed concerns about the potential repercussions of these tariffs. There is apprehension ...
Japan’s currency gained as much as 0.7% to 148.17 against the dollar on Thursday morning in Tokyo. Trump imposed tariffs on ...
In the past, Trump suggested a 10% tax on all imports. However, he has also talked about increasing tariffs to 20% or even 60 ...
Trump announced a base tariff of 10 per cent across all countries, with higher rates for dozens of trading partners including ...
Jonathan Reynolds is due to address MPs on Thursday morning after Mr Trump confirmed sweeping import levies on countries across the world, hailing America’s “declaration of economic independence”.
Trump’s tariff shock is bad, but not as bad as the uncertainty he’s layered on top of markets, companies and countries.
What the White House wants — or, at least, this latest excuse for tossing the global economy in a tariff blender — is tariff reciprocity. As Motor Mouth detailed last week, many are the nations that ...
United States President Donald Trump shocked the world on April 2 as he announced sweeping tariffs for at least 50 nations including India, China, EU, Japan and others. Watch the full video to listen ...