The president-elect says he will punish China if it doesn’t choke off the flow of ingredients, but Beijing could balk if relations between the countries sour.
The share of companies that are moving operations out of China jumped to 69% in 2024 from 55% in 2022, a Bain survey said.
Will it be Harleys again? Or is the EU going to hit back at more products when Donald Trump makes good on his tariff threats?
Australia is right to rail against Donald Trump’s tariffs, but we should also make our voice heard on Xi Jinping’s “China ...
According to Macquarie Group, China will need at least $800 billion in stimulus to offset the impact of a 60% tariff by stimulating domestic demand.
The debilitating inflation plaguing the Biden-Harris administration helped secure Donald Trump’s improbable return to the White House. Since President Joe Biden took office, prices have increased on ...
So is gold, given the inflation threats and (most importantly) the fact that anti-Western countries are diversifying from the greenback into gold. Buying some “real” assets – say, timber – also makes ...
After successfully riding China’s epic stock rally in late September, Fidelity International’s George Efstathopoulos is boosting positions again on expectations that fiscal stimulus will prop up the ...
President-elect Donald Trump's decision on a treasury secretary is about far more than whose name will be printed on America's money.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese did not raise the topic of US President-elect Donald Trump or the possibility of trade tariffs during his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Korea Joongang Daily on MSN2h
The biggest losers from Trumponomics
America’s president-elect wants to reshape trade, capital and labour flows. But who could be the biggest winners and losers?
In the course of discussion and commentary, the protectionist US Smoot-Hawley legislation of the 1930s and its disastrous consequences are increasingly being recalled.