By David Lawder, Joe Cash and Philip Blenkinsop WASHINGTON/BEIJING/BRUSSELS (Reuters) -President Donald Trump's sweeping ...
Donald Trump is pushing the global economic order to the breaking point. Unveiling new tariffs on Wednesday, the president ...
Trump presented the import taxes, which he calls “reciprocal tariffs” and range from 10% to 49%, in the simplest terms: the U ...
The United States has steered an economic order for 75 years based on trade and trust, making the country the world’s ...
British Prime Minister Kier Starmer said the U.K. government would react with “cool and calm heads,” telling business leaders ...
With a fundamentally different playing field today, the United States and its Western partners should adapt, if not adopt, ...
Some countries are promising swift countermeasures; others are asking for an opportunity to negotiate with the U.S. to avoid ...
Newsweek has compiled a full list of the 180 countries that will be subject to Trump's new import taxes here. Nations that are not subject to the tariffs include Russia, Belarus, Cuba and North Korea.
The United States is set to host the 2031 Women's World Cup, as the lone bidder for the tournament, FIFA president Gianni Infantino said Thursday at the UEFA Congress in Belgrade.
Foreign stock markets tumbled after opening on Thursday morning following President Donald Trump's announcement of a raft of tariffs on America's trade partners.
Asian markets and U.S. futures tumbled Thursday following U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of big increases in ...
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