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In his Rose Garden announcement of sweeping new "reciprocal tariffs," President Donald Trump held aloft a misleading chart ...
driving stocks upward temporarily before they tumbled again as the White House confirmed 145% tariffs would be placed on ...
Trump imposed the tariffs because, as he stated, Americans should manufacture the products Americans buy. American ...
In illustrating why the United States needed to impose new tariffs, President Trump held up a chart during the White House news conference at the Rose Garden.
President Donald Trump on April 2 announced a 10% tariff on all imports but even higher rates on dozens of trading partners, including China, India, and the European Union. The tariffs range between ...
Trump is holding a chart with a list of countries, saying it was too windy to put it on an easel. He is reading off of the list, with the tariffs the countries impose on the United States, and then ...
Some countries are not included in the new round of tariffs, including Canada and Mexico, which are already facing 25% ...
Chile is the top source of U.S. copper imports (51%), followed by Canada (31%), Mexico (7%), Peru (5%), and Congo (2%).
A stock market rout, historic in scale, has swept across the globe wiping more than $10 trillion off major markets, as ...
Donald Trump said over the weekend that he was planning to reveal a tariff rate on imported semiconductors this week.
On again, off again: the spectre of the potential economic fallout of tariffs has worried Americans since President Trump’s inaugural address, when he proposed to “tariff and tax foreign countries ...
The S&P 500 slipped into bear market territory in early trading but by the end of the day climbed back close to where it ...