Liberation Day, Trump and Tariffs
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Newsweek |
While the White House projects the new tariffs will generate $100 billion in annual revenue, industry analysts are concerned that the move could disrupt global supply chains and lead to higher prices...
Reuters |
U.S. President Donald Trump is preparing to announce wide-ranging new tariffs this week that businesses, consumers and investors are worrying will cause an intensifying global trade war.
Reuters |
"No American President in modern history has recognized the wide-ranging and harmful foreign trade barriers American exporters face more than President Trump," U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Gree...
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President Donald Trump is expected to unveil his Liberation Day tariff plan in the White House's Rose Garden Wednesday in an effort to end decades-long reliance on goods made overseas.
President Donald Trump is touting April 2 as the day the U.S. gets "money, and respect, back." Here's why he's calling it "Liberation Day."
Trump has repeatedly called April 2 “Liberation Day,” with promises to roll out a set of tariffs, or taxes on imports from other countries, that he says will free the U.S. from a reliance on foreign goods. To do this, Trump has said he’ll impose “reciprocal” tariffs to match the duties that other countries charge on U.S. products.
Vietnam cut import duties on Monday while other governments like Japan and Australia have tried negotiating with Washington.
President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” is fast approaching, and stock markets from Wall Street to Wellington, New Zealand, are falling Monday in advance
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On Wall Street, the markets have gone through weeks of extreme volatility amidst concerns about what a spike in tariffs will do to the economy. The financial sector, in particular, remains skittish about the exact scope and breadth of what Trump will announce at his pomp and circumstance-filled Wednesday presser.
President Donald Trump is set to unveil his latest round on tariffs on Wednesday. Here's how the tariffs could impact bourbon, farmers and autos in KY
The dollar firmed a touch and other currencies held tight ranges on Wednesday as traders anxiously awaited details of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff plans later in the day that could set the tone for markets in the near term.
U.S. stocks are swerving through another shaky day of trading, with uncertainty still high about just what President Donald Trump will announce about tariffs on his “Liberation Day.”