While the White House is claiming Canada's pledge to spend $1.3bn (£1bn) on a border protection plan has given it diplomatic ...
Gift Nifty was trading around 23,807 level, a premium of nearly 35 points from the Nifty futures’ previous close, indicating ...
Trump’s first two weeks in office have featured a flurry of policy announcements. • Of most consequence to markets are ...
While Trump has not yet specifically targeted imports from Australia, his offensive has profoundly destabilising economic and ...
The more President Donald Trump threatens tariffs on the US’s trading partners, the more the worry of another inflation wave ...
Temu has onboarded more sellers with U.S. inventory in recent years as lawmakers have zeroed in on the de minimis exemption.
The rise in the cost of imported goods will make American goods more competitive in price, Thorsten Polleit, former Chief Economist of Degussa, Europe's largest precious metal trading house and ...
Tariffs are now in effect on goods from China, and imports from Canada and Mexico could be next (again). Americans are likely to see higher prices on a wide variety of products as a result.
The economic and geopolitical pressure on Iran is set to increase in 2025, with renewed U.S. sanctions, nuclear tensions, and ...
Federal Reserve officials take great pains not to comment on fiscal policy, but the looming threat from tariffs is forcing ...
On Feb. 1, President Donald Trump announced tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China. By Feb. 3, the tariffs threatened on Mexico and Canada were deferred for a month, while those on China stayed in place.
Potential tariffs on Canadian, Mexican and Chinese goods on key sectors like autos, energy and tech hardware could impact certain companies. Read more on how investors can assess the impact.