Trump, tariff and Markets
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The probability of Trump's $2,000 tariff "dividend" checks arriving before June has risen to 21 percent, according to Kalshi.
A ruling against Trump would deliver his biggest legal defeat since returning to the White House. The court is considering Trump’s April 2 “Liberation Day” tariffs, which placed levies of 10% to 50% on most imports, along with duties imposed on Canada, Mexico and China in the name of addressing fentanyl trafficking.
2don MSN
Supreme Court keeps nation waiting on Trump tariff decision, releases 3 lower-profile opinions
The Supreme Court leaves Trump tariff challenge unresolved while delivering three rulings in lower-profile cases.
Are we getting Trump's $2,000 tariff dividend in 2026 stimulus check? Here's the latest on the Supreme Court decision in tariff ruling.
President Donald Trump enacted a new 25% tariff on “certain advanced computing chips” on Wednesday, according to a White House fact sheet. That includes Nvidia’s H200 chip and AMD’s MI325X. However, chips imported to support building up the US technological supply chain would be exempt.
M Company is rated a Buy with the softer FY2026 guidance and the potential Greenland-related tariff risks. Learn more about MMM stock here.
And, in December, Trump announced a $1,776 Christmas bonus for nearly 1.5 million active-duty U.S. military service members. The president suggested tariff revenue was the source of funding for the bonuses, though USA TODAY reported the Department of Defense footed the $2.9 billion bill from military housing funds.
When will we get the $2,000 stimulus check? What to know about Supreme Court decision on tariffs the latest status update on Trump's tariff dividend
Closing the AI trust gap, market impacts from Trump’s Greenland plans, details on 100% bonus depreciation, Saks files for bankruptcy.
"A decisive rethinking of American foreign economic policy that fuses the imperatives of national security with economic priorities runs through the Trump and Biden years," writes Inu Manak
EU chief calls President Donald Trump's Greenland tariff threats "a mistake" as European leaders warn of downward spiral in transatlantic trade relations.
Companies that rely on imported components or finished goods must assess tariff risk with the same rigor they apply to supply chain or credit risk