Trump’s Japan Trade Deal
Digest more
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick expressed confidence Sunday that the Trump administration will cut trade deals with key U.S. trading partners in the coming weeks — before steep tariffs kick in for dozens of countries.
President Trump announced deals with Japan, Philippines and Indonesia, but many other countries have yet to clinch agreements.
A level of predictability is finally emerging after six months of tariff threats. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" that Americans are "going to love the deals that President Trump and I are doing." As the Aug. 1 tariff deadline approaches,
News 3 reached out to Spanberger's opponent, Republican nominee Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, for a response to this announcement. The initiative was called "an arsonist's plan on fire safety." In Earle-Sears' press release, Spanberger is blamed for "rising prices, crippling regulations, and the worst inflation in 40 years."
Banking software group Temenos' chief financial officer said on Wednesday "wobbles" over U.S. tariffs that caused deals to be delayed in the first quarter are over, as the company reported second-quarter results that beat analyst expectations.
The world’s investors are enjoying a confidence boost after months of uncertainty as President Donald Trump finally starts signing trade deals.
April 9: Trump's higher "reciprocal tariffs" begin just after midnight. Hours later, the president says he is issuing a 90-day pause on those duties, except for China. Trump raises tariffs on Chinese goods from 104% to 145%, the highest rate so far this year.