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Trump officials like to say their policies are focused on helping Main Street, not Wall Street. “Wall Street has done very ...
In February, Trump reignited trade tensions by announcing a 25% tariff on imports from major allies like Canada and Mexico, ...
If investors widely bet that Trump will blink, that means there is no market freakout. And no market freakout in turn means no one is holding Trump’s feet to the fire, pressuring him to back away from ...
Stocks have climbed well off their post-Liberation Day lows, a sign that investors have moved past the trade-related concerns ...
The TACO trade is still the market’s expectations,” said Ed Mills, Washington policy analyst at Raymond James. Yet there could be a flaw in Wall Street’s TACO trade logic.
If financial conditions are restrictive, Wall Street sure hasn’t noticed. Stock indexes hit fresh records this week, and speculative meme stocks are back to mania levels. Meanwhile, smaller businesses ...
Trump delays Mexico tariff hike after call with Sheinbaum—despite vow of “no extensions.” Wall Street traders now call him ...
President has favored informal trade deals with the threat of massive tariffs as motivation. On Friday, he’s out of red lines ...
Discover the impact of looming tariff risks on global trade and the psychology driving the Trump TACO Trade and how partners may react. Read what investors need to know.
The Wall Street Journal If financial conditions are restrictive, Wall Street sure hasn’t noticed. Stock indexes hit fresh records this week, and speculative meme stocks are back to mania levels.
As Wall Street traders continued to share the accusation that “Trump Always Chickens Out,” the president falsely insisted that he did not delay a tariff deadline.
Tariff Man is back again — and so is Wall Street’s TACO trade. President Donald Trump is once more threatening to lob massive duties on a wide swath of US imports, everything from copper and ...