Trump, tariff
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President Trump announcing new tariffs of 30% on Mexico and the European Union to start on August 1. European trade ministers are meeting today after pausing their retaliatory tariffs that were supposed to start today.
Economists say U.S. businesses are struggling to pay new tariffs, and they are starting to pass on the costs to American consumers.
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KCEN-TV on MSNFirst signs of inflation after Trump tariff announcementsAfter widespread slowdown, Port of LA import surge is a sign Trump’s ‘whipsaw’ tariffs sparked ‘one last’ stockpiling push, executive director says 'American Idol' music supervisor, husband both found dead in California home, LAPD says
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Soy Nómada on MSNTrump tariffs begin to bite: Walmart, Mitsubishi, and Nike announce price hikesWalmart, Mitsubishi, and Nike are raising prices, citing Trump’s tariffs as inflation climbs—highlighting the trade war’s growing impact on U.S. consumers.
EU trade ministers have agreed that U.S. President Donald Trump’s 30% tariffs announced on the European Union are “absolutely unacceptable,” and they are studying a new set of countermeasures to respond to the move.
President Donald Trump on Saturday announced 30 percent tariffs on all European goods entering the U.S., prompting pushback from European allies.
Scavino and two other top officials sold Trump Media stock with a combined value of up to $10 million before tariffs news
Wall Street is pointing lower before the opening bell with new tariffs announced for Europe and Mexico and as the unofficial start of earnings season get under way this week.
President Donald Trump said he's “disappointed but not done” with Russian President Vladimir Putin, following an announcement of renewed military support for Ukraine and a plan to target buyers of Russian oil with tariffs up to 100% if a deal to end the war isn’t reached within 50 days.