Donald Trump, Hike Tariffs
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President Donald Trump has again delayed a tariff deadline. His back and forth on the policy spurred TACO accusations. What does it mean?
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.
The president was quick to undermine his new threat, which came after he had already delayed the original deadline.
As Wall Street traders continued to share the accusation that “Trump Always Chickens Out,” the president falsely insisted that he did not delay a tariff deadline.
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.
President Donald Trump announced looming tariffs on at least seven countries on Monday as he struggles to lock in new trade agreements with some of the biggest U.S. trading partners. The president first posted a pair of letters to the leaders of both Japan and South Korea on social media which stated they would be slapped with 25 percent tariffs starting on August 1.
Investors shrug off Trump’s latest tariff threat as nickname sets the investor’s mood - Experts weigh in on whether Trump will carry out his latest threat – and the consensus is that the uncertainty looming over the U.
President Donald Trump said “no extensions will be granted” to his Aug. 1 tariff deadline in a Tuesday social media post, the latest bit of uncertainty over when his tariffs will go into effect. “There has been no change to this date,
President Donald Trump has acknowledged he will struggle to secure more trade deals before his 90-day pause on tariffs expires and admits the process has been “complicated.” After promising to “liberate America” and secure “90 deals in 90 days,
After United States President Donald Trump paused his “Liberation Day” tariffs in April, his trade adviser Peter Navarro promised that the Administration would deliver “90 deals in 90 days”. But that deadline came and went today with the White House 88 trade deals short.