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Duties, latest news. Trump excludes smartphones from reciprocal duties, on 'cars, steel, pharma and chips there will be specific tariffs'

US President Donald Trump said that 'cars, steel, pharmaceuticals, chips and other materials will be included in specific tariffs to ensure that tariffs are applied fairly and effectively'

Apple store a New York City. Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by Michael M. Santiago / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)
  • White House, on cars, steel, pharmaceuticals and chips specific tariffs

    US President Donald Trump "stated that cars, steel, pharmaceuticals, chips and other specific materials will be included in specific tariffs to ensure that they are applied fairly and effectively". This was stated by a White House official, quoted by CNN.

  • Nyt, Americans take cover, boom in purchases of foreign-made products

    US consumers are running for cover by buying goods including coffee, canned vegetables and electronics affected by the tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump. "As the trade war between the Trump administration and China has escalated, many consumers have rushed to buy foreign-made products amid fears that companies may soon start raising prices," writes the 'New York Times'. "Some have rushed to buy big-ticket items like iPhones and refrigerators. Others have rushed to order cheap products from Chinese e-commerce platforms," notes the US newspaper. This week the White House imposed tariffs of 145% on all Chinese imports into the US, in addition to other previously announced duties, including a 25% tariff on steel, aluminium, cars and car parts. Some early data, the 'Nyt' points out, "show that consumers flocked to shops and stocked up on goods after the administration announced blanket tariffs on nearly all of the US's trading partners".

  • Taiwan: stock exchange authority extends limits on short selling for market stability

    Taiwan's Financial Supervisory Commission, the main financial regulator in the Asian state, has announced that it will extend temporary limits on short selling for another week to ensure market stability after the US tariffs triggered severe turbulence in the markets. In a note, the Financial Supervisory Commission emphasised that 'market stabilisation measures on short selling of shares have certainly had the intended effect of effectively curbing speculative selling'. This week Taiwan also activated the USD 15 billion stock stabilisation fund to support the market. The island's benchmark stock index is down 15 per cent so far in 2025.

  • Trump excludes phones, computers and chips from 'reciprocal' duties

    President Donald Trump's administration has decided to exclude smartphones, computers and other electronic devices from so-called 'reciprocal' tariffs, a move that could mitigate the impact on consumers and benefit industry giants such as Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co.

    According to Bloomberg, the exemptions - published on Friday by the US Customs and Border Protection - significantly reduce the scope of the new tariffs. Excluded electronic devices will not be subject to either the 125% duty imposed on products from China or the global 10% tariff applied to almost all other countries.

  • Ft, duties bring down European travellers to the US

    The number of European travellers visiting the United States has dropped dramatically due to political and economic tensions and fears of a hostile border under the presidency of Donald Trump. The Financial Times reports. According to the International Trade Administration, in fact, visitors from Western Europe who stayed at least one night in the US fell by 17 per cent in March compared to a year ago. Travel from some countries, including Ireland, Norway and Germany, fell by more than 20 per cent, an FT analysis of ITA data showed.

  • Collins (Boston Fed), ready to stabilise markets if necessary

    The Federal Reserve is prepared to take steps to stabilise financial markets in the event of significant turbulence. Susan Collins, number one at the Boston Fed, said this in an interview with the Financial Times, explaining that the US central bank has tools at its disposal to deal with any problems in the functioning of markets or liquidity. Despite the intense fluctuations in US markets, triggered in part by US President Donald Trump's aggressive trade policy on tariffs, "markets continue to function well overall at the moment without widespread liquidity problems," Collins said. The turmoil hit Wall Street stocks and the Treasury market, central to the global financial system. Rising US Treasury yields have raised concerns about liquidity and, therefore, the ease with which traders can buy and sell without affecting prices. "We are absolutely ready to intervene if necessary. The Fed's decision to intervene or not will depend on the conditions observed in the markets," Collins said.

  • US, Dem senators write to Sec: investigate Trump on insider trading

    The Washington Post's indiscretion has been confirmed. Several senior US Democratic senators wrote a letter asking the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to investigate whether Donald Trump violated securities laws and is guilty of insider trading and market manipulation while changing course on global tariffs.

    "We urge the SEC to investigate whether the tariff announcements, which caused the markets to crash and the subsequent partial recovery, enriched insiders and friends of the administration at the expense of the American public, and whether insiders, including the president's family, were aware of the tariff suspension they abused to make stock trades prior to the president's announcement," reads the letter, an initiative spearheaded by Massachusetts senator and former presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren.

    On Wednesday, Trump wrote on social media, "THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!!!". The post was written at a time of high market volatility and falling US indices. A few hours after his speech, the US president suddenly announced a 90-day pause on many tariffs. The move sent the US S&P 500 up several percentage points within minutes. Wednesday marked the best day for the S&P 500 since the recovery from the 2008 financial crisis.

  • Beijing: 'New US tariffs seriously discriminate against developing countries'

    Reciprocal US tariffs will cause 'severe discrimination for developing countries, particularly the least developed among them, and could also trigger a humanitarian crisis', denounced China's Minister for Trade, Wang Wentao, in a telephone conversation with the Director General of the World Trade Organisation, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

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