The Trump 2.0 era may have officially begun this week, but the much-hyped tariff-fueled trade war has not. At least, not yet.
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While they can’t predict the future, financial advisors are placing their bets on active investments, quantum computing, and more.
Call the considerations, which could have knock-off effects on global currency markets, a yuan-sided argument.
The world’s factory is slowing down and it might have nothing to do with the tariffs promised by the Trump 2.0 administration.
Beijing’s move came swiftly in response to the White House’s decision to slap new curbs on exports of vital chip components to China.
Trump promised in a Truth post to levy via 25% tariffs “on ALL products coming into the United States” from Mexico and Canada.
Just in time for Trump 2.0, China is on pace for history’s first $1 trillion trade surplus by a single nation, according to Bloomberg.
Of 12 major developed-market central banks, eight are in rate-cutting mode, with Australia, Norway, Japan, and Taiwan the odd men out.
The US and Mexico will apply tariffs to some US steel and aluminum imports to keep Chinese metals from entering America.
The EU wants everyone to know it has no intention of genuflecting toward a new Trump administration and won’t stop doling out Big Tech fines.
After a brief blackout period from late Saturday, TikTok began restoring services to US users on Sunday morning.
Blue Origin is going slower than SpaceX, but it also nailed a massive rocket launch on the first try. Jeff Bezos is back in the space race.