China, Trump and 104 tariff
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Future outlook
Beijing, which imports far fewer goods from the U.S. than it exports, is considering a range of nontariff measures amid growing trade tensions between the world’s two biggest economies.
From NBC News
Donald Trump put a ninety-day pause on the implementation of most of his tariffs.
From The New Yorker
“It’s time that Congress restores its authorities here,” Bacon said on CBS News over the weekend.
From CNN
Read more on News Digest
So many U.S. companies rushed in goods to avoid President Donald Trump's threatened tariffs that imports soared to near-record levels in recent weeks. Now, retailers and other importers are hitting the brakes,
The stock market shed gains after the Trump administration announced it was moving forward with stiff tariffs on Chinese imports.
President Donald Trump introduced his “discounted reciprocal tariffs” on over 200 countries on April 2. Most countries receive a base tariff rate of 10%, but for countries receiving more, the rates were calculated by halving a rate he displayed as “tariffs charged to the U.S.A. including currency manipulation and trade barriers.”
20hon MSN
Trump’s tariff fallout is expected to unfold over the coming days, and we’re on hand to bring you the latest updates and also flag the tech products that you might want to consider picking up now before price increases sting, or the currently available stock sells out.
Copper is the third-most-used metal in the United States, behind iron and aluminum, and imports make up 45% of refined copper consumption. This makes the metal and industries that
Explore more
About 87% of the avocados being imported to the US come from Mexico. After Trump's Liberation Day orders, the popular fruit will still come tariff-free.
European Union counter-tariffs on U.S. goods starting next week are set to halt a large flow of U.S. corn to Europe and raise costs for buyers chasing alternative supplies of the feed grain, traders and industry representatives said.
Trump hit EU imports with a 20 percent tariff on April 2, claiming the EU already had tariff measures against the U.S. that equated to 39 percent. This came after he imposed 25 percent tariffs on auto imports, as well as aluminum and steel.