Trump, tariffs and TACO
Digest more
President Donald Trump didn't like his new nickname 'TACO'. Here's why people are calling Trump TACO and the meaning behind TACO trade.
President Donald Trump seems willing to spend “financial markets capital” whenever stocks are up, say strategists at GlobalData, TS Lombard.
1hon MSN
Jamie Dimon hates ‘TACO’ but says Trump did the right thing in ‘chickening out’ over tariffs - JP Morgan Chase CEO also warns investors against assuming tariffs won’t be permitted to take effect
President Donald Trump has again delayed a tariff deadline. His back and forth on the policy spurred TACO accusations. What does it mean?
President Donald Trump complained to his aides about the lack of progress being made on trade deals as he was debating whether to push back his tariff deadlines yet again, according to a report. The president announced on Monday he was imposing a new wave of 25- to 40-percent tariffs on products from more than a dozen countries—including key trading partners such as Japan and South Korea—unless those countries reach new trade deals with the U.
Explore more
Tariff Man is back again — and so is Wall Street’s TACO trade. President Donald Trump is once more threatening to lob massive duties on a wide swath of US imports, everything from copper and pharmaceuticals to goods from Japan and Russia.
"TACO trade" was coined in May about President Trump's whiplash tariff policies. Here's what it means and why it's resurfacing in political discourse.
Stocks have clawed their way to another record high this week as investors continued to extend increasingly precarious bets on trade. Traders and investors have ridden an extraordinary spring rally by betting against President Donald Trump’s myriad tariff threats,
US stocks fell on Friday after President Donald Trump threatened a 35% tariff on Canada — a sharp escalation in an ongoing trade war.
Trump dubbed it the "Liberation Day," but the crypto market, like the rest of the markets, got trapped in the aftershock. The crypto market cap declined from $2.74 trillion on Apr. 2 to $2.42 trillion on Apr. 8 due to the shock Trump's tariffs caused.
Trump dropped a new tariff threat on Canada, promising an additional 35% import tax on all goods from the largest U.S. trade customer — starting Aug. 1.