The moves were driven largely by the expectation that tariffs and a possible full-blown trade war will stoke inflation.
President Donald Trump said he spoke with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Monday morning as fallout continues from ...
Paul Krugman and Larry Summers are among the economists warning that Trump's tariffs may drive up prices, trigger job losses ...
Trump's wide-ranging tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China divided lawmakers and world leaders over the weekend. President ...
Ahead of tariffs starting Tuesday, President Donald Trump posted on social media that he spoke Monday morning with Canadian ...
Wall Street opened lower after Trump's tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China, sparking fears of trade wars that'll slow ...
By Daphne Psaledakis, David Lawder and Bart H. Meijer WASHINGTON/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - U.S. stocks opened on Monday at their ...
Are you stocking up on any products? Ditching plans for big purchases this year? Planning to switch to American-made goods?
Donald Trump is the first president to use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose tariffs, teeing up likely legal battles that will test his executive authority.
Stocks in the US dropped Monday morning, following European and Asian markets lower as investors digested Trump's tariff ...
Trump added more reasons for the tariffs, complaining on social media that American banks can’t “open” or do business in ...
Financial markets that had bet trade wars could be avoided are reassessing the risks of a sharp global slowdown, resurgent ...