Trump hits more countries with steep tariffs, markets tumble

U.S. President Donald Trump holds a chart next to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick as Trump delivers remarks on tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo

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U.S. President Donald
Trump's latest wave of tariffs on exports from dozens of trading
partners, including Canada, Brazil, India and Taiwan, sent global stock markets
down on Friday as countries pushed for talks to clinch better deals.
Trump's new tariff
rates include a 35% duty on many goods from Canada, 50% for Brazil, 25% for
India, 20% for Taiwan and 39% for Switzerland.
The
presidential order, listed higher import duty rates of 10% to 41%
starting in seven days for 69 trading partners, effectively taking the U.S.
effective tariff rate to about 18%, from 2.3% last year, according to analysts
at Capital Economics.
Global shares
stumbled, with the STOXX 600 down 1.3% at its lowest in a month. U.S. stock
index futures were down 1%, indicating a drop at the start of trade on Wall
Street later. Futures tied to Canada's main stock index slipped.
The market response
was not as volatile as April's global asset declines, said Wei Yao, research
head and chief economist in Asia at Societe Generale, referring to the market
slide after Trump's initial tariffs announced on April 2.
"We are all
getting much more used to the idea of 15-20% tariffs being manageable and
acceptable, thanks to the worse threats earlier," she said.
But Trump's tariff
rollout comes amid evidence that they have begun driving up prices.
U.S. Commerce
Department data released Thursday showed prices for home furnishings
and durable household equipment jumped 1.3% in June, the biggest gain since
March 2022.
Countries hit with
hefty tariffs said they will seek to negotiate with the U.S. in hopes
of getting a lower rate.
Switzerland said it
would push for a "negotiated solution" with the U.S.
"It’s a massive
shock for the export industry and for the whole country. We are really
stunned," said Jean-Philippe Kohl, deputy director of Swissmem,
representing Switzerland's mechanical and electrical engineering industries.
Taiwan President Lai
Ching-te said the new 20% tariff rate for the island was "temporary"
and that he expected to reach a lower figure.
South Africa's Trade
Minister Parks Tau said he was seeking "real, practical
interventions" to defend jobs and the economy against the 30% U.S. tariff
it faces.
Southeast Asian
countries breathed a sigh of relief after the U.S. tariffs on their
exports were lower than threatened and levelled the playing field with a
rate of about 19% across the region's biggest economies.
Thailand's finance
minister said a reduction from 36% to 19% would help his country's economy.
"It helps
maintain Thailand's competitiveness on the global stage, boosts investor
confidence and opens the door to economic growth, increased income and new
opportunities," Pichai Chunhavajira said.
Australian products could
become more competitive in the U.S. market, helping businesses boost exports,
Trade Minister Don Farrell said, after Trump kept the minimum tariff rate of
10% for Australia.
But businesses and
analysts said the impact of Trump's new trade regime would not be positive for
economic growth.
"No real
winners in trade conflicts," said Thomas Rupf, co-head of Singapore and CIO
Asia at VP Bank. "Despite some countries securing better terms, the
overall impact is negative."
"The tariffs
hurt the Americans and they hurt us," winemaker Johannes Selbach said in
Germany's Moselle Valley.
"Thousands of
families who produce wine in Europe and
thousands of
families in the importing, wholesaling, retailing, and restaurant business in the
U.S. are dependent on the flow from both sides," he said, adding jobs and
profits would be hit.
Goods from all other
countries not listed in Trump's executive orders will face a 10% U.S. import
tax. Trump had previously said that rate might be higher. The administration
also teased that more trade deals were in the pipeline.
The Republican president has tapped emergency powers,
pressured foreign leaders, and pressed ahead with trade policies that sparked a
market sell-off when they were first announced in April.
Trump's order said some trading partners, "despite
having engaged in negotiations, have offered terms that, in my judgment, do not
sufficiently address imbalances in our trading relationship or have failed to
align sufficiently with the United States on economic and national-security
matters."
Trump issued a separate order for
Canada that raises the rate on Canadian goods subject to fentanyl-related
tariffs to 35%, from 25% previously, saying Canada had "failed to
cooperate" in curbing illicit narcotics flows into the U.S.
The higher tariffs on Canadian goods contrasted
sharply with Trump's decision to grant Mexico a 90-day reprieve from higher
tariffs of 30% on many goods to allow time to negotiate a broader trade pact.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he was disappointed by
Trump's decision and vowed to take action to protect Canadian jobs and
diversify exports.
India is in trade talks with the U.S. after Washington
imposed a 25% tariff on New Delhi, a move that could impact about $40 billion
worth of its exports, an Indian government source with knowledge of the talks
told Reuters on Friday.
China is facing an August 12 deadline to reach a
durable tariff agreement with Trump's administration. A U.S. official told
reporters that they are making progress toward a deal.
The European Union struck an agreement on a
blanket 15% tariff with the U.S. at the end of July.
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