The Trump administration's tariff calculations appear on paper to be a simplified math of America's trade relationships.
Washington, Wall Street and global leaders have spent two days fretting whether President Donald Trump is open to compromise on his new tariffs or whether they are as final as the White House has been making them out to be. Trump ended some of the mystery on Friday: He’s ready to talk, though maybe not quite ready to cut deals.
President Donald Trump's tariffs will raise the prices on some goods more dramatically than others. See which items will suffer the biggest jumps.
The Texas Senator said he is "not a fan of jacking up taxes on American consumers" and hopes the tariffs are "short-lived."
Here's what today's polls and the American public say about President Donald Trump's job performance and current approval ratings amid tariff chaos.
JPMorgan warned of an increased recession risk due to President Donald Trump's tariff policies, while Peter Schiff thinks the U.S. has been in recession for a while.
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The retro approach has been years in the making, with Trump refusing to back down in the face of a tumbling stock market and public recriminations from the United States’ top allies. But Trump says that for companies and countries that want to get out from under the tariffs there is a way out: Build their products in America or lower their trade barriers.
Experts discuss how the president's global tariffs will affect the Sunshine State, which has been a solidly red bastion.
The U.S. dollar is down 6% versus the euro so far in 2025, which means European vacations are unlikely to be a bargain this summer.