The world’s two largest economies did not cut a deal to avert sweeping U.S. tariffs, which came into effect after midnight.
To the relief of Wall Street, the President agreed to pause his tariffs against Mexico and Canada, but he remains as determined as ever to upend the international trading order.
Americans should expect prices for items including new homes, cars, cellphones and groceries to jump if trade wars break out with Mexico, Canada and China, local experts say.
Canada and Mexico agreed to keep doing things they were already doing, and Trump revealed that he cannot be trusted with unilateral tariff power.
President Donald Trump's 10 percent tariffs are set to increase prices on goods like electronics, clothing, toys, and auto ...
President Trump delayed tariffs on Mexico and Canada, but imposed 10% levies on China, prompting Beijing to retaliate. Follow along for live updates on stocks and markets, including the Dow Jones ...
If the tariffs President Trump is threatening to levy against other nations' goods result in fewer imports and exports, that ...
President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Mexico and Canada, purported to be part of drug war, amount to little more than ...
The duties are set to take effect Feb. 10 and come just a day after last-minute deals with Mexico and Canada delayed tariffs ...
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) expressed concern that President Trump is “stumbling into a trade war” by imposing additional ...
The 10% tariff that Trump ordered on China was set to go into effect Tuesday, though Trump planned to talk with the Chinese president in the next few days.
China countered President Donald Trump’s across-the-board tariffs on Chinese products with tariffs on select U.S. imports. It ...