Your next smartphone might be more expensive because of President Donald Trump’s recently imposed 10% tariff on Chinese imports.
Why, Naroff asks, would the White House upend the international trade structure by going after our closest trading partners?
President Donald Trump's tariffs on America's three largest trading partners have led to questions about how tariffs work and who pays for them when goods are imported.
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Hosted on MSN2 obscure clean energy metals are caught in the crosshairs of the US-China trade warChina outright banned exports of two metals to the United States following the Biden administration’s decision to further ...
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Hosted on MSNOil set for third straight weekly decline amid tariff concernsOil prices rose marginally in Asian trade on Friday but were on track for a third straight week of decline, hurt by U.S.
Deputy Director for the Asia and Pacific Department, Mission Chief for Japan, IMF ...
The Trump administration’s tariffs and restrictions on Chinese imports are already hurting businesses making everything from ...
Gold has been on a yearlong bull run, hitting new highs amid crises such as the wars in Ukraine and Gaza and expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts. Bullion has surged to over $2,836 per troy ounce ...
Taiwan's exports rose more than expected in January thanks both to artificial intelligence demand and companies getting in ...
Asian shares Friday were mixed, with Chinese technology stocks rising as most other Asian equities declined. Japan’s ...
U.S. President Donald Trump meets Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba for the first time on Friday as two allies wary of ...
The Trump administration has flaunted tariffs against some of the country's largest trade allies, a move that could cost millions.
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