Trump threatens more tariffs on Mexico
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Canada and Mexico were left off the list of countries affected by Trump’s global 10% baseline tariff during his announcement of reciprocal tariffs on April 2.
From Bloomberg
Trump's tariff rollout includes a 10% tariff on imported goods across for a majority of countries worldwide, but other nations were hit harder.
From USA Today
Stocks ripped higher and bond yields jumped Wednesday after the White House pulled back on its trade war.
From USA Today
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7don MSN
Automaker Stellantis is temporarily halting production at a plant in Canada and a plant in Mexico shortly after President Donald Trump announced a 25% tariff on imported vehicles.
President Donald Trump reiterated that tariffs will apply to imported vehicles, but products that comply with the trade deal between the U.S., Canada and Mexico appear to be exempt for now.
UBS downgraded GM’s stock to neutral from buy and slashed its price target on the stock to $51 from $64. Analysts also cut their first-quarter earnings estimate for GM to $2.79 a share from $2.89. The auto giant reports its first-quarter results on April 29.
US-Canada-Mexico joint World Cup goes from unity to acrimony thanks to tariffs and '51st state' talk
As the United States prepares to welcome the world for FIFA’s Club World Cup this June, golf’s Ryder Cup in September, the World Cup next year and the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028, the question become
The three FIFA World Cup 26 co-hosts learned who they will face in the group stage of the 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup.
The Associated Press on MSN9d
US-Canada-Mexico joint World Cup goes from continental unity to international trash talkingIt’s hard to know how, exactly, the current geopolitical fissures might affect the 2026 World Cup, its organization and coordination, fans’ travel plans and more.
W hILE the tariffs announced on April 2nd were met with panic and consternation around the world, Mexico celebrated. Along with Canada, it was exempted from sweeping “reciprocal” tariffs imposed by the United States. President Claudia Sheinbaum hailed the escape as “good for the country”. The Mexican peso rose, as did the country’s stockmarket.
As President Trump pushes his massive global tariffs into effect, America’s former trading partners are designing their own, retaliatory tariffs, that are sure to have a walloping effect on Americans’ pocketbooks.