Trump, Wall Street and tariffs
Digest more
The so-called TACO trade will be tested as markets wait to see if Trump will actually follow through with his latest threat or if he will put it on hold soon.
Ongoing US-China trade tensions and volatile policy shifts have left investors caught between betting on tariff deescalations and bracing for increased uncertainty.
White House officials maintain bankers’ concerns are overstated and discount expected revenues from the president’s tariffs.
The Dow gained more than 700 points after the U.S. and the EU made progress on trade talks.
May’s payroll figures will show how labor conditions are holding up aid trade uncertainty. Jamie Dimon sees crack in bond market coming. BofA sees major market inflection point.
President Donald Trump's administration is considering a stopgap effort to impose tariffs on large parts of the global economy under an existing law that includes language allowing for tariffs of up to 15% for 150 days,
are one of the ways Wall Street has managed to profit from the chaos of the Trump administration. Just a week after “Liberation Day,” in which he announced sweeping global tariffs, Trump ...
WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump is no fan of an emerging nickname on Wall Street mocking his on-again, off-again approach to tariffs. Trump lashed out at a reporter on May 28 who asked for ...
Live updates and the latest news as Trump and Elon Musk hold a White House press event and a federal appeals court pauses a lower court block on tariffs.